Posts Tagged ‘wwf’

WWF, the Great Bear Sea and the Northern Gateway Pipeline.

Tuesday, January 10th, 2012

Last fall staff and supporters of the World Wildlife Fund traveled to the British Columbia to explore the central coast aboard the Island Roamer, with me as their guide.  To read about one of our grizzly encounters, check out this short blog by Linda Nowlan.

This region, formerly referred to as the Mid-Coast Timber Supply Area, is now commonly known as the Great Bear Rainforest.  Here, terrestrial and marine ecosystems nourish each other. Nutrients from spawning salmon feed trees, mammals, birds, insects and amphibians in the forest. Meanwhile the forest acts as a nursery, regulating the waters that rear the next generation of salmon. Ocean and forest are not distinct entities – they are a continuum.

By referring to this region as the “Great Bear Sea,” perhaps WWF will help people make the important connections between forest and ocean, as the public hearings for the Northern Gateway Pipeline get underway. The threats from the pipeline are not unique to whales, salmon or bears. Rather, they put a large complex system at risk – a system that includes people (namely First Nation communities) and multitudes of marine and terrestrial species.

According to WWF’s blog:

Upwards of 4,200 individuals and groups have signed up to have their voices heard (at the hearings) – the largest show of concern in Canadian history about the environmental impacts of an industrial project.

If you’re not sure why we should care about the proposed pipeline and the Great Bear Sea, this Youtube video (filmed during our excursion on the Island Roamer) will give you a taste of what is at stake.

 

To see more gorgeous footage, and to learn about the Northern Gateway Pipeline, watch the award-winning documentary SPOIL.

 

 

A Spirit Bear primer via Youtube

Sunday, March 6th, 2011

If you ask somebody in British Columbia what a Spirit Bear is, many people will know that it is a rare genetic variant of a black bear that has white fur. They may know this, in part, because the Spirit Bear is the Official Mammal of the province.

Ask the same question of people outside of British Columbia and many people have no idea what you’re talking about. Since moving to Ontario, I have noticed a lot of blank faces when I mention Spirit Bears in conversation. “Huh?” said an acquaintance,  “there are polar bears in BC?”

Based on feedback I received after posting a photo of a spirit bear on my blog, I realized that outside of the bear loving conservation community and BC, most people do not know they exist. It is not their fault. There are thought to be less than 400 Spirit Bears in existence.  By comparison, a 2004 estimate by the World Wildlife Fund put the number of wild pandas – the very icon of endangerment – at approximately 1600.

So, for those of you who don’t know what a Spirit Bear is, or think that polar bears live in British Columbia,  take a look at this primer on Spirit Bears from the good people at the Nature Conservancy.