Times Colonist

Conservati­onists urge action to save wildlife

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MONTREAL — Canada might be known for its wide-open spaces and wildlife, but the federal and provincial government­s need to dramatical­ly increase their efforts if they’re to save the country’s endangered species, conservati­onists say.

A World Wildlife Fund report last month created alarm with its finding that global wildlife population­s dropped 60 per cent over the past 40 years, and recent data show the situation in Canada is not a lot better.

A WWF report last year found that Canadian mammal population­s dropped by 43 per cent, amphibian and reptile population­s by 34 per cent and fish population­s by 20 per cent over a similar time period. Some types of birds have lost between 43 and 69 per cent of their population­s.

Population­s of species listed under the federal Species at Risk Act, or SARA, declined by an average of 28 per cent since the legislatio­n was enacted in 2002.

Margot Venton, a lawyer with the environmen­tal law group Ecojustice, says part of the reason for the declines is that the regulatory framework is full of holes and is often ignored by government­s.

Venton notes that some provinces, such as B.C., don’t even have their own endangered species legislatio­n, while others have appeared unwilling to take the steps to list new species or protect habitat. And while the federal government has the right to intervene, she says it generally hesitates to step into provincial jurisdicti­on.

“That’s a real hole, and we need to fill that hole, and we need to fill it quickly, because of all the recent evidence we have about how rapidly the problem is accelerati­ng,” she said in an interview.

Last Wednesday, three environmen­tal groups published a petition calling on the federal government to protect boreal caribou in northern Ontario, saying a decade of mismanagem­ent by the province has put the animals increasing­ly at risk.

But the Ontario case is part of a larger pattern of government­s failing to protect Canada’s at-risk population­s, according to a conservati­onist with the David Suzuki Foundation who has studied the animals.

Rachel Plotkin says caribou herds across Canada are in decline, largely due to habitat loss and economic activities such as logging. She says government­s have been reluctant to act, citing as an example the Quebec government’s decision this year to allow the small Val-d’Or herd to die off because it would be too expensive to save them.

Instead of protecting habitat, she says, government­s tend to favour “mitigation measures” such as building fences or culling predators. “It’s a failure to set limits for industrial resource extraction.”

Delay is another problem at both the federal and provincial levels, according to James Snider, the vice-president for science, research and innovation at World Wildlife Fund Canada. He notes that it can take years from the time a species is recommende­d for protection under SARA to it being added to the list.

Environmen­t Canada counters that it has taken many steps to address the backlog of species waiting to be listed and to boost funding for conservati­on. That includes a commitment to double the amount of nature protected across Canada and a $1.35-billion investment in conservati­on in its 2018 budget.

In emails, the B.C. and Alberta government­s expressed their commitment to

 ??  ?? An eagle flies over the waters of Chatham Sound near Prince Rupert. Some types of birds have lost more than two-thirds of their population­s.
An eagle flies over the waters of Chatham Sound near Prince Rupert. Some types of birds have lost more than two-thirds of their population­s.

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