Wildsight has announced that the South Selkirk caribou herd has reached a critically low level of population, with only three females remaining.
John Bergenske, Wildsight’s Conservation Director says the organization is calling for immediate and full protection for all critical mountain caribou habitat in BC.
“It’s devastating that we’ve nearly lost the South Selkirk caribou herd,” said Bergenske. “What’s worse is that unless we take immediate action to protect all critical mountain caribou habitat, the South Purcells and other southern herds won’t be far behind.”
Over the past year, the South Selkirk herd, the southernmost re=maining herd in North America, has lost nine animals, leaving only three females in the mountains south of Nelson, according to the aerial census taken this spring.
“We’ve known for decades that logging, road-building and uncontrolled recreation in mountain caribou habitat is slowly killing off our caribou herds,” said Eddie Petryshen, Wildsight’s Conservation Coordinator. “Protecting intact habitat in our mountain rainforest ecosystems is the only way to give our southern caribou herds a chance to survive, but federal and provincial governments have been dragging their feet for years, ignoring the ongoing destruction of mountain caribou habitat.”
Fewer than 250 mountain caribou remain in the Kootenay and Columbia area, with most herds being found around Revelstoke. Only 13 caribou were found in the south Purcells herd census last year.
“The federal government has mapped the mountain caribou habitat that is necessary for the species’ survival, but they have only protected portions of it,” says Bergenske. “This tragic loss of all but three caribou in the South Selkirks herd has to be a wake-up call for Environment Minister Catherine McKenna to act on her responsibility under the Endangered Species Act to protect all critical habitat right now. This is an emergency and our mountain caribou can’t wait any longer for planning without action.”
Southern mountain caribou, a unique ecotype who live in the inland temperate rainforest of BC’s southern interior, feed exclusively on tree-growing lichen in the winter, and need old growth forests to survive.
Wildsight says that packed winter trails in the caribou’s habitats make them more vulnerable to predators, and impacts of logging, industrial, and recreation eave them isolated with nowhere to run.
BC’s Mountain Caribou Recovery Implementation Plan, after more than a decade, has failed to stop the loss of caribou, let alone recover populations.
“Not only do we need to protect all critical caribou habitat now, we need to restore degraded and fragmented habitat,” says Bergenske. “That means the province and the federal government need to put real resources into habitat restoration immediately.”
“Today, the South Purcells herd is facing not just loss of their habitat, but serious threats from ever increasing recreation, including a new proposal for heliskiing and helibiking in their habitat,” says Petryshen. “If we don’t take emergency measures now, it may be too late for the South Purcells herd.”