China Daily

Canadian province bans grizzly bear hunting

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VANCOUVER — The government of the Canadian province of British Columbia has decided to immediatel­y end the hunting of grizzly bears throughout the province.

Under the new rules, which were brought in on Monday and took effect immediatel­y, it is illegal to hunt grizzlies for sport, or when an animal is killed for its parts and not its meat.

Hunting grizzlies for their meat is still permitted outside of the coastal region known as the Great Bear Rainforest.

“It is abundantly clear that the grizzly hunt is not in line with (British Columbia’s) values,” said Doug Donaldson, British Columbia’s minister of forests, lands and natural resources.

George Heyman, the province’s minister of environmen­t and climate change strategy, said “our government is committed to improving wildlife management in British Columbia, and today’s announceme­nt, along with a focused grizzly bear management plan, are the first steps in protecting one of our most iconic species”.

In August, the government announced that it would end trophy hunting of grizzly bears at the conclusion of the 2017 grizzly bear hunt on Nov 30, and stop all hunting of grizzly bears in the Great Bear Rainforest. There are an estimated 15,000 grizzly bears in British Columbia.

“We also want to promote the healthy grizzly bear viewing economy in British Columbia and give everyone the tremendous opportunit­y to see these incredible animals in their natural habitat,” Heyman said in a news release.

First Nations, who are the predominan­t Aboriginal peoples of Canada south of the Arctic, will still be able to harvest grizzly bears for food and for social and ceremonial reasons based on existing treaty rights, the government said.

The ban on grizzly hunting, however, fails to address the destructio­n of grizzly habitat in British Columbia — the predominan­t threat to the species, said Adam Ford, Canada research chair in wildlife restoratio­n ecology at the University of British Columbia.

He said the hunting ban is clearly a popular move, but a recent report by British Columbia’s own Auditor General on grizzlies concluded that habitat loss has the largest impact on grizzly bear death rates.

The Guide Outfitters Associatio­n of British Columbia also has argued that the greatest threat to grizzly bears is not hunting but human activities that degrade the grizzly bear habitat.

Ian McAllister, the executive director and co-founder of Pacific Wild, a non-profit wildlife advocacy organizati­on based in British Columbia, said “there are also significan­t concerns around global warming and climate change affecting the diet of grizzly bears, including a lack of salmon and changing vegetation types”.

 ?? RICK BOWMER / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A grizzly bear traveling across the Porcupine River Tundra in the Yukon Territorie­s, Canada, in Aug 2009.
RICK BOWMER / ASSOCIATED PRESS A grizzly bear traveling across the Porcupine River Tundra in the Yukon Territorie­s, Canada, in Aug 2009.

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