Events
Join us!
Donate
Donate Now!
Contacts
Learn How
Subscribe
Learn How
«

Rare Plants and Rare Plant Communities in Alberta Face an Uncertain Future

March 1, 2013

Wild Lands Advocate article, December 2012, by Dr. Kevin Timoney. Timoney presents a case study of a prescribed burn near Saskatchewan River Crossing, and looks at the rare plant communities in the area, comparing the health and threats to those communities both before (in 2007) and after (in 2009 and 2011) the burn. He finishes by making recommendations to the government regarding the future of the prescribed burn program.

“The Alberta government and Parks Canada need to do a better job of incorporating science into their decision-making; they need to change policy that has proven ineffective, outdated, or detrimental. Plans to burn other parts of the upper North Saskatchewan area should be postponed. Prior to any future prescribed burns, monitoring the effects of the 2009 burn should continue over the next decade in order to determine if the burn is achieving ecologically defensible objectives. If it is not, then prescribed burns should cease.”

 

BH-AR-03.jpg
No public hearings are scheduled. Only one Alberta organization, the Alberta Wilderness Association, is independent enough that it continues championing public land and the people's right of access to it. So people must speak individually, as they have so many times before, directly to the premier, the minister of Sustainable Resource Development and their MLA, and remind them of what public land means to all of us, that none of it is surplus to our needs, that we do not want it sold.
- Bob Scammell, 2003
© 1965 - 2024, Alberta Wilderness Association. | Disclaimer | Privacy Policy | Federally Registered Charity Number 118781251RR0001 Website design by Build Studio
Save Your Cart
Share Your Cart