Categories
Cottage Life

The (sometimes controversial) reintroduction of 8 Canadian wildlife species

Some wildlife species do best when left alone. Others need a helping hand, usually because their environment has changed too rapidly for them to keep up—thanks most often to extreme weather, predation, and human changes to their habitat. Even worse, some species, such as the Vancouver Island marmot, are endemic, or only found in specific spots, so extinction in that area means extinction from the planet. Check out eight current and past (and some controversial) programs helping Canadian wildlife thrive against their existential challenges.

 

Vancouver Island marmot
Controversy rating: low

The Vancouver Island marmot is critically endangered and only found on Vancouver Island in subalpine and alpine meadows, usually 1,000 metres above sea level with their family groups. It is one of the largest members of the squirrel family, and is about the size of a house cat. During the summer, the marmot’s favourite activity is lounging on a rock in the sun. They build colonies that range in size and purpose—from small burrows for a quick escape from predators, and larger burrows for hibernation. 

Threats
There are many obstacles facing its survival, including predators (wolves, cougars, and golden eagles), extreme weather in alpine and subalpine meadows, and avalanches that crush the marmot’s colonies (yikes!).

Reintroduction plan
In 2003, the Marmot Recovery Foundation started working on a captive breeding program. “Releasing species born in captivity back to the wild means the best chance of survival,” says Adam Taylor, Executive Director of the Marmot Recovery Foundation of Wildlife Preservation Canada (WPC). Captive breeding and release, feeding programs, and habitat restoration are the best protection strategies. WPC  and partner facilities build artificial habitats, which helps marmots adapt back to the wild and go about their natural behaviours including nesting, digging, gnawing, and watching for predators. Maintaining the use of these will help marmots build colonies for hibernation and preservation against predators. 

What’s the upshot?
Reintroduction efforts have been “successful and relatively non-controversial,” says Taylor. “There is a severe population decline and biologists agree that without dramatic intervention, the species will go extinct,” he says. Some biologists are concerned that the population is too small, and that captive populations won’t be able to live in the wild again.  “It’s tricky because we want to keep the marmots alive, healthy, and breeding,” says Taylor. “At one point, caring for one marmot was caring for 10 percent of the captive population.” 

Despite the challenges, the program continues to be successful. “There were less than 30 marmots and now the population has risen to 250. We have been able to reestablish a fairly large wild population. We had five colonies in 2003, which has now grown to 25 natural colonies,” says Taylor. 

 

Taylor’s checkerspot butterflies
Controversy rating: high

The Taylor’s checkerspot butterflies are rare, with only three known wild populations in Canada. They are a keystone species, an indicator for a healthy ecosystem, according to WPC. They live in Garry oak ecosystems and meadows on Denman Island, Hornby Island, and near Campbell River in British Columbia. 

Threats
Agricultural and urban development, invasive trees and plants, fire suppression, and drought are all threats to this butterfly, says Andrea Gielens, MSc, RPBio, Wildlife Biologist with WPC. Historically, meadow areas would face small, regular, and localized fires, leading to a steady supply of regrowth in the early stages of forest regeneration. The butterflies seek open meadows when their current one regrows into a forest. “This species would normally live in a habitat that’s regularly cleared by fire. Without this process, the meadows regrow and succeed back into the forest, leaving the butterflies to find another open meadow,” says Gielens. 

Reintroduction plan
To reintroduce this species, biologists focus on breeding larva, raising them into adult butterflies, and then using the butterflies to produce the next generation of larva. WPC only takes minimal larva from the wild population for the captive breeding program. “New generations are released into the wild, after larvae grow into full butterflies,” says Gielens. 

What’s the upshot?
Reintroduction efforts are controversial. Forest fires are necessary for this species’ habitat, but the public still remains concerned about urban development and tree removal. “Part of our job is education. We want to highlight the benefit of tree removal for this species’ survival,” says Gielens. “We must maintain the natural ecosystem’s balance and the natural landscape,” says Gielens.

It is important to preserve this butterfly because they are a “historical species on the landscape,” according to Gielens. “They do not migrate, like Monarchs, but live in one area for their entire lives,” she says. To date, WPC’s conservation program has produced 3,364 Taylor’s checkerspot caterpillars and butterflies for release back into the wild.

 

Western painted turtle
Controversy rating: low

The Western painted turtle is the only native turtle species to British Columbia. It can live up to 50-years-old and is the largest painted turtle subspecies, with a shell reaching 25 cm in length. 

They live in the shallow waters of lakes, marshes, slow-moving streams, and ponds. Female turtles sometimes lay their eggs on beaches in loose, warm, and well-drained soils.

Threats
This turtle faces many threats including development, water pollution, erosion, and infilling. They are killed by cars, captured, or even poached for food. Non-human threats include raccoons, skunks, coyotes, parasites, and diseases.  

Reintroduction plan
WPC is working to educate the public on this species’ needs. “Since turtles nest in the night, it is important for people to not disrupt them,” says Gielens. People should know that, “taking turtles as pets is illegal and can harm a population for decades because taking a female turtle could risk removing hundreds of eggs. Every turtle is important for the growth of the population,” she says.

What’s the upshot?
Education has been one of the most effective tools. Once people know more about the challenges facing turtles they are more willing to take action and protect the species. For example, pet owners, who understand how they are affecting the species, are less likely to let their dogs off leash. “Being able to rely on the public reduces individual damage, creates awareness in the community, and makes it a lot easier to preserve this species,” she says. 

Not only is the Western painted turtle the only native turtle species to British Columbia, these turtles are especially important for nutrient cycling because they eat dead fish and plants, according to WPC. 

How to identify Ontario’s 8 species of turtles

 

Oregon spotted frog 

The Oregon spotted frog only lives in the floodplain wetlands, side channels, and swamps, wetland grasses, and bushes of British Columbia’s Lower Fraser Valley. It’s an excellent swimmer and great at hide-and-seek.

Threats
Loss of habitat due to development, agriculture land conversion, and resource extraction have threatened this frog species. They also face challenges with invasive species and pollution.

Reintroduction plan
Captive breeding is the most effective tool for protecting these frogs. WPC uses “headstarting,” and cares for young frogs until they are grown. They also use conservation breeding by raising frogs in controlled environments, such as zoos. Furthermore, there are efforts to create dikes and water control structures, to maintain what is left of their habitat. “We need to find a way to make two systems work together,” says Gielens. For example, humans “must ensure that when maintaining and cleaning drainage ditches, they are doing so in a way that benefits humans and frogs,” says Gielens. 

What’s the upshot?
Efforts continue to develop in order to preserve this species. With only a few hundred Oregon spotted frogs left, it is critical for conservation action to continue.  

WPC’s conservation breeding program has pioneered breeding techniques that are now producing a record number of young for release each year. Without the thousands of tadpoles and froglets that WPC has reintroduced back to the wild since 2010, this species would be that much closer to extinction in Canada.

 

Eastern Massasauga rattlesnake
Controversy rating: high

The Eastern Massasauga rattlesnake is Ontario’s only remaining venomous snake, and poses a very small threat to the public. It’s “the medicine keeper” of the land, according to First Nations’ traditions, and cannot be confused with other snakes because of its rattle that has a distinct high-pitched buzzing noise. The snake is shy and avoids humans. They live in meadows, peat lands, shoreline habitats, wetlands, bedrock barrens, and coniferous forests. They often hang out by the water (they are generally found within 50 km of the Great Lakes) and thrive in sunny open patches of land.

Threats
This snake faces many threats including habitat loss, being hit by cars, intentional killing, and illegal collection for pet trade. 

Reintroduction plan
Reintroduction for snakes is fairly new, but necessary, says Jonathan D. Choquette, Lead Biologist at the Ojibway Prairie Reptile Recovery at the WPC. The reintroduction efforts were first introduced in 2006, where a group of snakes were rescued from a development site. No snakes survived the winter trial, leading to a further population decline.

What’s the upshot?
Choquette and his team are delving into understanding why the first winter trial failed, and will integrate their findings in the long-term reintroduction program. New efforts include, “mapping suitable winter hibernation habitats, designing a novel artificial hibernation feature, testing these with a surrogate species, for the the first time last fall, artificially hibernating Massasauga at planned reintroduction at Ojibway Prairie,” says Choquette.  

This snake is important for our ecosystems, but has very small populations of only one to three dozen adults in the Carolinian Region.

Wild Turkey
Controversy rating: low

The eastern wild turkey spends its days foraging for leaf litter, chasing bugs, and milling for seeds and is a great flyer (in short distances).This species is important to Ontario ecosystems and is native to southern Ontario forests. Prior to 1909, the wild turkey lived north of Lake Simcoe and eastward between Toronto and Trenton. It was extirpated—extinct in a local area but present in other locations—from Ontario for 80 years. Reintroduction efforts have successfully brought the eastern wild turkey back to southwestern Ontario. 

Threats
“The eastern wild turkey was extirpated from Ontario by the early 1900’s due to unregulated harvest and rapid loss of forest habitat for agriculture within their historic range,” according to Patrick Hubert, Senior Wildlife Biologist–Policy Advisor with the Ministry of Northern Development, Mines, Natural Resources & Forestry. These threats led to the emergence of wildlife management. “This set the stage for successful eastern wild turkey restoration in Ontario,” says Hubert.

Reintroduction plan
Reintroduction began in the 1980’s, in collaboration between the ministry and stakeholders like Ontario Federation of Anglers and Hunters and Federation of Ontario Naturalists. The American government and the National Wild Turkey Federation from the United States also supported the project. Restoration of the eastern wild turkey to the province was supported for the ecological, social and economic benefits. 

What’s the upshot?
Reintroduction efforts have been successful. These efforts led to 4,400 turkeys being released to over 275 sites. The turkey population grew to 70,000 in 2007. “From an ecological perspective, the re-introduction was necessary,” says Hubert. “The wild turkey is an important prey species for predators like coyote, red fox, and bobcat (where their ranges overlap). The role of the wild turkey in renewing forest understory has been discussed and debated, but since the eastern wild turkey is well adapted to deciduous forest we can assume there are mutual benefits for turkeys and other species in this ecosystem,” he says. 

The American Elk
Controversy rating: medium

The American elk is the largest member of the deer family and is only one of four members who lives in Ontario. They are social creatures and are rarely seen alone. They can live in many different areas, and thrive in open country, parks, and forest regions. 

Threats
According to Biologist Bruce Ranta, “they were extirpated from the province in the late 1800s due to pressures from human settlement, excessive agriculture, and shifts in climate.”

Reintroduction plan
Ranta was part of the Ministry of Natural Resources team that started to reintroduce these elk in the late 1990’s. Elk were reintroduced in Lake of the Woods, Lake Huron North Shore, the Nipissing and French River area, and around Bancroft and North Hastings.

What’s the upshot?
Despite successful efforts, there was controversy around reintroduction because of agricultural development and traffic concerns. “It actually may get the Ministry of Transportation to do some forward thinking that seems to be lacking in Ontario. We are lacking in comparison to some jurisdictions who use fencing, overpasses, and underpasses to facilitate the movement of animals across natural barriers,” says Ranta. 

There are many reasons why elk are crucial to Ontario wildlife populations, but Ranta emphasizes that “elk are important for enhancing biodiversity.” They also support the hunting and viewing industries, and provide economic benefits through tourism.

 

Eastern Loggerhead Shrike
Controversy rating: medium

The Eastern Loggerhead Shrike is one of the most imperilled birds in Canada, with a small Ontario population of 24 breeding partners last year. They live in small pockets of grassland in Ontario, Quebec, and Manitoba, the persistence of habitat loss has restricted its areas. In Ontario, you can only find the shrike near the greater Toronto area, in the plains of Carden and Napanee.

Threats
Since this songbird thrives in grasslands, its main threats are residential and agricultural developers, and solar farms (because solar panels can look like a smooth body of water, resulting in a collision when the shrike attempts to land. This is known as the “lake effect.”). Predators include black-billed magpies, crows, bull snakes, feral cats, and prairie long-tailed weasels. Motor vehicles also do a number on the birds, which perch on fences and utility lines, and sometimes collide with passing cars. 

Reintroduction Plan
Efforts to preserve this species of shrike started in 1991, in response to a rapidly declining population. Since 2003, WPC has been monitoring the existing eastern loggerhead shrike population and created a captive breeding program to bolster the existing wild population. “We are trying to keep them as wild as possible,” says Hazel Wheeler, Lead Biologist of Eastern Loggerhead Shrike Recovery program. Although they are in zoos, the shrikes are not an exhibition. “We don’t want them to be acclimated to humans,” she says. To maintain a natural-like environment, the team developed a set of standards to maintain similarity to its natural environment, including cages large enough for the birds to fly around in. The enclosures also include “tools”’ that the shrikes can use to mimic their wild habits: nicknamed “the butcher bird” for a reason, they “impale their prey from perches, or barbed wire, and use their talons to rip bite-sized pieces off their prey,” says Wheeler. 

What’s the upshot?
Reintroduction efforts continue, but not without controversy. Since the population in Ontario is so small, some have questioned the importance of the conservation efforts. “I find this question interesting: what can they do for us? Yes, you can make the argument that they are a predatory songbird who helps to maintain certain populations such as mice, which has an overall impact on biodiversity—but, I like to push back. Why does any animal need to have direct value to us? I would argue that shrikes have just as much right to exist as we do.” Wheeler continues, “if we lose a shrike, then we lose something else. Then we lose something else,” she says. “And the cycle just keeps continuing.” 

Since 2003, WPC has been breeding and reintroducing loggerhead shrikes back to alvar grasslands in Ontario to bolster dwindling wild populations. The eastern loggerhead shrike is WPC’s longest running conservation breeding program, demonstrating the time and effort required to save a species from extinction. 

Bill 108 could threaten cottage-country at-risk species

Categories
Pets Files

Rover can stay forever frozen in time

Saying goodbye to a furry best friend has become more difficult than ever for most pet owners, especially in this hi-tech world, where daily walks with our pets help keep us grounded in our community and provide us with unlimited tail-wagging unconditional love.

Rover or Kitty was an active part of the family for one or two decades, popping up hilariously in many family photos. Flipping through the photo album, those great memories are enough to bring a tear to your eye.

Losing your first pet
Losing your first pet as an adult is the hardest. As a child, we’re not as conscious of the aging process in the people and pets around us. Essentially, our pets and parents are there for our childhood – barring any accidents or illnesses – throughout our formative years. It’s not until you’re older and initially think, as in childhood, your pet will live forever.

Unfortunately, you come to the rude awakening that your pet dog will only live 10 to 15 years on average, and a pet cat might live up to age 20. You will most likely have two or three pets over the course of your lifetime and have to say a painful goodbye to each one. What if you could get them back in statue form?

A lifelike fur statue
For an increasing number of pet lovers who have trouble letting go, there is a trend toward freeze-drying the beloved family pet and displaying it in the home.

According to Anthony Eddy’s Wildlife Studio, “Freeze-drying is revolutionary technology that has become an economically feasible alternative for preserving pets. This highly specialized field of taxidermy makes use of large freeze-dry machines that remove the moisture from the specimen while it remains frozen….

“Unlike regular taxidermy, this process allows a pet’s natural body and bone structure to remain intact. The result is the individual characteristics, body, and facial features are barely disturbed.” Techniques like silicone injections, wire rods to hold a pose, special cosmetic grooming, and glass eyes create such lifelike specimens, as evidenced by the photos, you would think they were just taking a nap.

The costs vary depending on the animal’s weight, up to $4,000 according the Daily Mail. Anthony Eddy, 63, owner of the U.S. pet preservation service, said, “It is a very emotional thing for pet owners, they don’t want to bury or cremate their beloved animal, and they want them to still be around.”

Loving tribute or creepy reminder? 
Eddy mentioned that the majority of his customers are older and have had their pets for a long time. “I do accept that some people will find it weird, but it is growing in acceptance and what we do is a fine art.”

While many pet owners are comforted with a stuffed version of their pet, many of us would rather not face a daily reminder of our loss, preferring to allow time to heal our pain and perhaps eventually bringing a new pet into our lives. What do you think: would you want a stuffed version of your pet in your home?

Credit photo: posterize / FreeDigitalPhotos.net

Categories
Nouvelles quotidiennes

Bali places moratorium on new hotel construction

In order to preserve the extraordinary landscape of Bali, authorities have decided to limit the construction of new hotels, and are more likely to favour quality over quantity in the future.

The Indonesian island paradise of Bali, which has been experiencing a surge in tourism, saw its uniqueness undermined by the proliferation of new buildings needed to accommodate its burgeoning tourist trade.

The governor of the island has placed a moratorium on all hotel construction in the three main tourist areas in order to assess the situation and take the time to analyze all the issues.

Given the popularity of the island with tourists, it is now not uncommon to see traffic jams on the roads linking the resorts of Kuta, Sanur, Nusa Dua and Ubud.

Over 2 million tourists visited the Indonesian island in 2010, and more than 2.5 million are expected to visit this year.