March 22, 2013
Sandhill Crane Hunt
Letter from AWA to Environment Canada, opposing a proposed new hunt for sandhill cranes in…
Species at risk are the canary in the mine for our relationship with the earth.
Be they butterflies, snails or the more visible grizzly bear and woodland caribou, their loss is a direct example of society’s failure to manage the environment in a sustainable, renewable way. AWA will continue working to ensure that the habitat of species-at-risk and other wildlife is secure through the establishment of designated protected areas. AWA will also continue to support efforts that improve species-at-risk legislation and to enforce existing legislation in the spirit with which these laws were created.
Indigenous and local varieties of plant and animal life are vital components of a wilderness landscape. Some species are especially sensitive to human activity and are worthy of special management to prevent their extinction or extirpation.
Legally, species-at-risk do not receive adequate protection in most cases throughout Alberta. Recently introduced federal legislation only protects species on federal lands, while provincial legislation only sets up optional recovery plans without legal obligations to protect habitat.
The major gap between the current legal definition of protection and a scientific one is that the species and its individual “nest, den or shelter” are protected by law, but habitat – key to the survival of individual organisms and the long-term survival of a species – is not protected in most of Alberta’s landscapes.
At least five species are missing from Alberta’s landscapes: the extinct Banff long-nosed dace (extinct in 1986); plains grizzly bear and plains wolf (extirpated pre-1900); black-footed ferret (extirpated 1974, no longer any wild populations in Canada); and greater prairie chicken (extirpated 1990).
Many more species are on the brink of extinction: there are currently at least 41 Threatened or Endangered species in Alberta, 15 of which are listed by the province and 37 by the federal government.
Indigenous and local varieties of plant and animal life are vital components of a wilderness landscape. Some species are especially sensitive to human activity and are worthy of special management to prevent their extinction or extirpation. Legally, species-at-risk do not receive adequate protection in most cases throughout Alberta. Recently introduced federal legislation only protects species on Federal lands, while provincial legislation only sets up recovery plans without legal obligations to alter industrial development practices.
The major gap between the current legal definition of protection and a scientific one is that the species and its individual ‘nest, den or shelter’ are protected by law, but habitat- key to the survival of individual organisms and the long-term survival of a species- is not protected in most of Alberta’s landscapes. Until adequate legislation is in place, AWA will continue working to ensure that species-at-risk and other wildlife habitat is secure through the establishment of designated protected areas.
Each species-at-risk faces specific threats that jeopardize its existence. Some species are naturally rare in the world, like the Banff springs snail, which occurs only in a few hot springs in a single watershed. Other species are more common in some places but rare in Alberta (e.g., burrowing owl). Still other species were once abundant, but through years of neglect, industrial activities or over-hunting, they have declined to rarity (e.g., woodland caribou) or have gone extinct (plains grizzly). All species-at-risk are currently rare, often declining in number and vulnerable to extinction from human activity.
The common thread among species-at-risk conservation is that the probability of their extinction is directly related to habitat amount.
Most species-at-risk legislation in Canadian provinces and SARA, the federal Species at Risk Act, do not adequately address habitat protection.
While habitat loss is the main factor affecting species survival, other factors are also working against at-risk species. These other factors are known as the “extinction vortex” by conservation biologists and include environmental and demographic stochasticity.
March 22, 2013
Letter from AWA to Environment Canada, opposing a proposed new hunt for sandhill cranes in…
March 8, 2013
Wild Lands Advocate update, December 2012, by Katie Rasmussen. In October of 2012, EcoJustice released…
December 21, 2012
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November 6, 2012
AWA letter to Premier Redford and AESRD Minister McQueen outlining our concerns regarding imminent logging…
September 29, 2012
On September 28, 2012 the Canadian government informed the Federal Court that it will again…
September 28, 2012
September 28, 2012 letter from federal Justice Department to Federal Court stating that release of…
September 4, 2012
A letter from three of Canada’s leading bat biologists to federal Environment Minister Peter Kent,…
August 16, 2012
After missing a mandatory legal deadline to submit a draft recovery strategy for woodland caribou…
August 13, 2012
August 13, 2012 letter from federal Justice Department to lawyers for First Nations and ENGOs…
June 26, 2012
Parks Canada report, detailing the results of a public consultation process. Canadians were asked for…
May 17, 2012
Wild Lands Advocate article, April 2012, by Carolyn Campbell, examines the current state of provincial…
February 3, 2012
News release from COSEWIC (Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada) that their…