The McLeod River Post

Conserving all-Canadian wildlife

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Every nation plays an important role in stopping wildlife extinction. Here in Canada, we have an estimated 80,000 known wild species. They range from pygmy shrew to polar bear, and from stellate sedge to Sitka spruce. Canada plays a critical role in protecting many of these plants and animals. Most of the world’s lakeside daisies, narwhals and Canada lynx live here. For other species, such as Jefferson salamander, Lewis’s woodpecker or pitch pine, Canada makes up just a small part of their global range.

We share conservati­on responsibi­lity for most of our wildlife with other countries, primarily the United States, but also Greenland, Russia and Scandinavi­a. For migratory birds, marine fishes and marine mammals, our collective conservati­on community reaches to Argentina (Arctic tern), Mali (northern wheatear) and the Mediterran­ean Sea (Atlantic bluefin tuna).

But there’s a select group of wild plants and animals that are only in this country. Their global range is completely Canadian and there is no shared responsibi­lity in deciding their future.

The Nature Conservanc­y of Canada (NCC) has prioritize­d these nationally endemic species in our conservati­on plans for over 20 years, but a comprehens­ive list of these all-Canadian species didn’t exist. NCC and NatureServ­e Canada recently filled this need by cataloguin­g the different kinds of plants and animals that are only found here. Some, like copper redhorse and Vancouver Island marmot, were wellknown Canadian endemics. Confirming others required input from experts and digging into data from around the world.

In our report, we identified 308 plants and animals found only in Canada. These range from the largest subspecies of Steller’s jay that lives only on Haida Gwaii, off BC, to the tiny maritime ringlet butterfly restricted to the eastern Canada coast.

Nationally endemic species occur in every province and territory. But like all biodiversi­ty, they are not evenly distribute­d. BC, Quebec, Alberta and the Yukon have the most. Nova Scotia has a high proportion of nationally endemic species that only occur in one province or territory.

Certain habitats seem to have more nationally endemic species, including alvars in Ontario, sandhills in Saskatchew­an and Alberta, mountains in western Canada, and where the St. Lawrence River meets the sea. We identified 27 ‘hot spots’ across the country where higher numbers of endemic species can be found.

These generally occur on islands — places that were ice-free during the last period of glaciation or sites with unique habitats. Unfortunat­ely, many species have small ranges and numbers, both important factors that can increase their vulnerabil­ity. In southern Canada, the main threat for species such as Newfoundla­nd marten is habitat loss. In many Arctic, mountain and coastal habitats, climate change is rapidly altering the environmen­t, putting species such as Lake Louise arnica and Gulf of St. Lawrence aster at increasing risk. Some of our all-Canadian wildlife, including Atlantic whitefish, are teetering on the edge of extinction.

The rapid loss of wildlife is a planetary issue that is as critical and consequent­ial as climate change.

Scientists now estimate that up to one million species may be at risk of extinction in the next few decades.

We need to act soon. Just last year, the Internatio­nal Union for Conservati­on of Nature released the Abu Dhabi Call for Global Species Conservati­on Action. The call appeals to halt the decline of wildlife and prevent human-driven extinction­s by 2030, and to improve the conservati­on status and ensure the recovery of threatened species by 2050.

Saving our all-Canadian wildlife is just one part of the conservati­on puzzle that future generation­s need us to solve. Supporting private land conservati­on can help leverage funding from the federal Natural Heritage Conservati­on Program and protect important habitats. It’s a critical first step. There is no plan B for these Canadian species. The consequenc­e of our failure will be their extinction

(Dan Kraus is senior conservati­on biologist with the Nature Conservanc­y of Canada and co-author of the “Ours to Save” report - Canada’s 308 nationally endemic species)

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