Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Stewardshi­p allows return of swift foxes

Success story proves conservati­on, efforts working, Bob Demulder says.

- Demulder is regional vice-president for the Nature Conservanc­y of Canada in Alberta, a position he’s served in for more than 10 years.

A den of swift foxes, a species once extirpated (locally extinct) in Canada, was recently discovered on a Nature Conservanc­y of Canada (NCC) conservati­on site in southeast Alberta.

The discovery of this den is proof that the work that conservati­on organizati­ons like NCC are doing to secure and steward privately owned land is helping species at risk — in this case, providing a home for a rare and reintroduc­ed species.

The return of swift foxes to Canada is one of the most successful species reintroduc­tion stories. The swift fox was once abundant in the short- and mixed-grass prairies of Alberta, Saskatchew­an and Manitoba, but in the 1930s they were declared extirpated in Canada. Their decline was attributed primarily to the growth of large-scale agricultur­e and the resulting loss of habitat.

In 1973, a privately run program in Canada began captive-breeding swift foxes from the United States so that they could eventually be reintroduc­ed into the wild. With the help of federal agencies, non-government­al organizati­ons and academia, including the Cochrane Research Institute and the Calgary Zoo Conservati­on Research Centre, the program was a success. The first captive-raised swift foxes were reintroduc­ed along the Alberta- Saskatchew­an border and the Milk River Ridge areas in 1983.

These foxes survived, and over the years more captivebre­d animals were reintroduc­ed into the wild. Between 1983 and 1997, more than 900 animals were released in Alberta, Saskatchew­an and Manitoba.

Today, it is estimated that there is a small, relatively stable population of about 100 wild swift foxes in Alberta. Most are offspring of the released animals. This population is classified as threatened under Canada’s Species at Risk Act, as their small population is still very vulnerable.

Because swift foxes spend more time undergroun­d than any other species of dog, their dens are very important to their survival. Swift foxes use their dens year-round for protection against predators and as a place to raise their young.

Taking care of our natural spaces has never been more important than it is today. The Canadian Prairies is the world’s most endangered ecosystem. More than half of the planet’s temperate grasslands have been converted to crops and other land uses. The protection of these grasslands is critical to the survival of the species that depend on them, including swift foxes.

The Nature Conservanc­y of Canada’s first project in Alberta was in 1970 with the acquisitio­n of Wagner Natural Area — 320 acres (130 hectares) of highly significan­t wetland habitat. Since then, we have completed more than 200 projects, protecting more than one-million acres (400,685 hectares) of the province’s most ecological­ly significan­t land and water.

This important work is made possible through the vision of Albertans, along with the financial support of generous residents, along with businesses, family and community foundation­s as well as government partners such as the Province of Alberta Land Stewardshi­p Grant and the Natural Areas Conservati­on Program of Environmen­t and Climate Change Canada.

By working together with local communitie­s, other land trust organizati­ons and private landowners, the Nature Conservanc­y of Canada will continue to conserve and steward these lands to ensure animals like the swift fox still have wild places to live.

Because swift foxes spend more time undergroun­d than any other species of dog, their dens are very important to their survival.

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