Regina Leader-Post

LAST HERD OF CROSSBORDE­R CARIBOU ARE DOWN

‘It’s game over’ for South Selkirk mountain herd

- AdrIAn humphreys

The last remaining herd of cross-border mountain caribou is now effectivel­y extinct after an aerial count found only three survived the winter, all of them female.

The alarming census of the South Selkirk population of southern mountain caribou, placing it at a number meaning de facto extinction, comes after years of warnings from scientists and conservati­on groups.

Government biologists twice did the head count this spring, once in ideal conditions in fresh snow to help tracking from above, and found the alarming decline, said Mark Hebblewhit­e, a Canadian wildlife biologist at the University of Montana and a science adviser to the federal government.

“Last year there was 11 and now there are three. And critically, there are no males this year. Without a male, it’s game over.”

The South Selkirk herd has the distinctio­n of being among the southernmo­st caribou in the world and last to roam into the lower 48 states of the United States, making it a big deal south of the border where it is seen as a species extinction.

Hebblewhit­e said it epitomizes a problem across Canada, with caribou in B.C., Alberta, Ontario and Quebec facing a similar fate.

Caribou once roamed widely in Canada and the northern United States. Government documents tell of Aboriginal oral accounts of the beasts being so plentiful they were described as “like bugs on the land.”

It surprises no one that the range of the caribou is greatly reduced today from its historical heights.

In the 1800s, the southern mountain caribou went deep into the northern United States. The population and range of the herds has been shrinking since.

The last southern mountain caribou seen in Montana, for instance, was documented in 1958.

Only the South Selkirk herd — nicknamed the Grey Ghosts for their rare sightings — still wandered across the border into Washington and Idaho.

The causes are multiple: natural predators, overhuntin­g, climate change, loss of old growth forest and disturbanc­e of their habitat by human activity — from logging and oil and gas developmen­t to snowmobili­ng.

Southern mountain caribou need large tracts of interconne­cted habitat of old-growth forest where they can separate themselves from predators, particular­ly wolves, bears and cougars. Roads, trails and seismic lines that divide the landscape spoil that protection.

Environmen­tal and conservati­on groups call the loss of the South Selkirk a disaster and a warning for the remaining strains of the caribou in Canada.

“This tragic loss of all but three caribou in the South Selkirks herd has to be a wake-up call,” said John Bergenske, conservati­on director with Wildsight, a conservati­on advocacy group. “This is an emergency and our mountain caribou can’t wait any longer for planning without action.”

Efforts at salvation have been tried.

Caribou from other areas were added to the South Selkirks in the late 1980s and 1990s. Over 11 years, more than 100 mountain caribou were transplant­ed south, bolstering it temporaril­y.

Maternity pens were built to protect pregnant caribou and newborn calves from predators during and after calving.

The B.C. government protected about 2.2 million acres of caribou habitat from forestry and snowmobili­ng.

First Nations groups imposed their own bans on their members hunting caribou, a traditiona­l activity. And lawsuits forced added protective measures from government for various subgroups of the mountain caribou, leading to curtailing natural gas, petroleum and mineral tenures in affected areas.

Even culling of wolves — a controvers­ial project called aerial wolf removal, meaning sniping wolves from helicopter­s — is in place.

“The functional loss of this herd is the legacy of decades of government mismanagem­ent across caribou range,” said Hebblewhit­e. “It is completely unsurprisi­ng. Bad things happen to small population­s,” he said. “We are facing this across the country.”

As if to highlight the cumbersome bureaucrac­y of government interventi­on for endangered wildlife, the federal government last month announced it will be rewriting a draft agreement with British Columbia after negotiatio­ns with First Nations to plan survival strategies for the remaining southern mountain caribou. That hardly offers encouragem­ent for quick results.

On Friday, the B.C. government announced $2 million to aid in caribou habitat restoratio­n.

 ?? DAVID MOSKOWITZ ?? A female mountain caribou from the beleaguere­d South Selkirk herd feeds in a wet meadow in British Columbia’s Selkirk Mountains, close to the U.S. border.
DAVID MOSKOWITZ A female mountain caribou from the beleaguere­d South Selkirk herd feeds in a wet meadow in British Columbia’s Selkirk Mountains, close to the U.S. border.

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