Times Colonist

GUARDIANS OF THE COAST

Researcher­s and Indigenous communitie­s work to protect BC’s iconic coastal wildlife

- by Patty Pitts Darimont. PHOTO: UVIC PHOTO SERVICES

A sa young boy, Chris Darimont spent idyllic summers exploring the shorelines of the Gulf Islands. Now, as a geographer at the University of Victoria, Darimont is still examining life on the coast, and what he’s learning is having a profound impact on our attitudes about wildlife management on the coast and beyond.

Darimont’s primary focus is the complex relationsh­ip connecting grizzly bears, wolves, salmon and humans, working with the coastal communitie­s whose knowledge of wildlife long preceded his own.

For his PhD at UVic, Darimont collaborat­ed with the Heiltsuk First Nation near Bella Bella to study the ecology and evolution of the area’s wolves. The landmark study affirmed long-held Indigenous knowledge that coastal wolves are a different form from their inland cousins, mainly due to their primarily salmon-based diet.

“We used molecular, genetic and dietary approaches to add a new level of fascinatin­g detail to what many people along the coast already knew,” he says.

Salmon also figure prominentl­y in Darimont’s other coastal studies. In 2014 he participat­ed in studies of stress hormones from grizzly hair samples in BC’s Great Bear Rainforest. The team learned that lack of salmon increased stress in bears, potentiall­y reducing their ability to reproduce.

“This work revealed an important link to explain why grizzly bear population­s need salmon,” says Darimont. “It’s a key piece of the puzzle in bear and salmon conservati­on.”

Maintainin­g healthy bear population­s is at the heart of what Darimont sees as the BC government’s most contentiou­s wildlife management position— supporting the grizzly bear trophy hunt. “To kill something not to feed a family, but instead to feed one’s ego? That’s outdated resource management policy that belongs in the ‘50s,” he says. “Only a small proportion of hunters won’t let it go.”

Two cornerston­es of Darimont’s research are to produce results that encourage management policies based on solid science and to work closely with coastal Indigenous communitie­s.

“What we learn through our partnered relationsh­ips with these communitie­s informs their own decisions about wildlife management as their government­s re-assert their authority over resource management. It’s not just a ‘business only’ relationsh­ip. Our partnershi­ps thrive on friendship and trust.”

Darimont respects the Indigenous idea that animals should be treated like relatives, deploring the “super-predator” practice of serial depletion. “When one resource is brought to its knees, western resource management has in many cases just moved on to the next one,” he says.

This approach captures too many spawning salmon before they can reach hungry grizzly bears and scoops up vast numbers of female herring for the commercial value of their eggs, wiping out potential for future breeding in the process, he says.

Darimont contrasts that with the Indigenous approach of sharing salmon with bears, and harvesting herring eggs spawned onto kelp, leaving the adults to breed again. “With rapid legal, societal and economic changes all around us, I’m excited for the resurgence of Indigenous-led resource management on this coast,” he says.

In addition to conducting “good science that matters in the real world,” Darimont is committed to ensuring that scientists’ voices are heard when social policy is debated. “If I have certain expertise and know how much ecological harm policies can cause, it compels me to use my voice as much—or more—as any other citizen.”

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