The Province

Study shows black bears need a varied salmon diet

- HINA ALAM

Black bears need access to different species of salmon rather than huge numbers of a single variety in order to be healthy, a new study by Canadian researcher­s indicates.

Lead author Christina Service said if bears have access to a “portfolio of different salmon species” then the animals have access to more food for a greater part of the year.

“It is the equivalent of humans going to an all-youcan-eat buffet for just a couple of days versus having one good meal a day for many months,” said the PhD candidate from the University of Victoria, adding that different species of the fish have different run timings and use different habitat.

When they have access to the fish for a larger part of the year, they end up eating more salmon overall and are in better health, she said.

The team of researcher­s used chemical techniques on hair samples from 379 black bears and 122 grizzly bears between 2009 and 2014 to estimate their salmon consumptio­n, which showed population productivi­ty and health.

They studied animals across a 22,000-kilometre stretch along coastal B.C.’s “Great Bear Rainforest,” in collaborat­ion with the Wuikinuxv, Nuxalk, Heiltsuk and Kitasoo/ Xai’xais First Nations.

With bears hibernatin­g in winter, they have only certain windows where they’re able to eat, Service said.

So by having access to salmon earlier in the year bears can start fattening up sooner, she said.

Kitasoo/Xai’xais First Nation Chief Coun. and study collaborat­or Douglas Neasloss said he is concerned that the federal government’s current salmon management focuses on large salmon runs and often ignores smaller runs that contribute to diversity.

Study co-author Chris Darimont said researcher­s have expressed concern about the health of all salmon population­s.

“It’s a difficult time to be a salmon these days with climate change, reduced ocean productivi­ty, over-exploitati­on, diseases from salmon farms and neglect in management,” he said.

Service said the federal government should think about the management of fisheries in a holistic sense.

This means thinking of fisheries as benefiting not just commercial and recreation­al interests but other wildlife and ecosystems too, she said.

“We need to consider species diversity and not just abundance.”

So not just those that are easy to produce in hatcheries and commercial­ly valuable but the smaller runs too, she said.

“Those (smaller) runs really matter for bears.”

She said research shows the more variety of salmon that bear eat, the bigger they get, the more offspring they are able to have and the better those offspring do.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada