Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

Animals, like those in Jasper, know how to dodge wildfires, say biologists

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 30 Jul, 2024 09:41 AM
  • Animals, like those in Jasper, know how to dodge wildfires, say biologists

Parks Canada wants everyone to know that despite the wildfire scorching Jasper National Park, Bear 222 is OK.

"She looks like a very healthy grizzly bear right now," the federal agency said on a social media thread.  The bear, fitted with a radio tracking collar, has been followed since the blaze began last week.

"Grizzly Bear 222 and her two cubs tucked themselves into a wet spot by the Athabasca River."

Despite the loss of about a third of the Jasper townsite, including homes and buildings, as well as the sorrow over the destruction of a beloved piece of Canadian landscape, experts say animals know how to protect themselves in a wildfire.

"Fire is a natural process and we expect animals to find new places to live," said James McCormick, Jasper's human-wildlife coexistence specialist.

Mark Boyce, a wildlife biologist at the University of Alberta, said Jasper's animals know what to do when their home is on fire.

"Most of the critters get out of the way," he said. 

"The number of animals (killed) is usually pretty small. In general, it's not a major source of mortality."

Boyce helped on a study that looked at the effects of the 1998 wildfire in Yellowstone National Park in the U.S., which burned about a third of the park. It found that of that park's 17,000 elk, only about 350 died in the blaze.

"That's a pretty small fraction," he said. 

A 2023 paper in the journal Conservation listed how animals react to fire. 

Large animals can simply run for it. Smaller animals tend to hide underground or in sheltered places within the burn, such as tunnels, stumps, root holes, pathways under moist forest litter and spaces under rocks.

Birds can fly away, although some may be affected by smoke inhalation. Fleeing the flames also stresses animals, the paper says. 

"Typically, the most affected are the slower-moving species, like turtles, badgers, and elderly and very young animals who are unable to escape. Moreover, as wildfires often occur in late spring or summer, stress also delays the recovery and reproduction of the population."

However, Boyce said that once the flames die down, burned-over land means salad days for many species, who feast on the tender green shoots of a regenerating forest.

"That regrowth is very attractive," he said.

"Bears, elk, moose, deer all really thrive. These fires are highly beneficial in the medium term." 

There will be some grim months, said Boyce. 

"It will be a couple years before it's green and lush again. But not very long.

"The ecosystem has not suffered. The park is doing just fine."

Much like Bear 222.

"She has been eating a mix of berries and clover on the edge of the Jasper Park Lodge golf course," Parks Canada says. 

Fire officials said Monday that fires within the Jasper townsite are out, although the fire continues to rage elsewhere in the park. 

Highways through the park remain closed. Federal Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault said a staged re-entry plan is being developed for the town's 5,000 permanent residents as well as its thousands of seasonal workers, although he said there's no timeline for it. 

The fire could last for months, officials said. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Arson attack on Vancouver synagogue

Arson attack on Vancouver synagogue
BC politicians are condemning the arson attack on a Vancouver synagogue last night. Premier David Eby says in a statement posted on social media that the incident at Vancouver's Schara Tzedeck synagogue was a disgusting and reprehensible act of antisemitism that has no place in the province.

Arson attack on Vancouver synagogue

Forecasters warn B.C. of hot summer, as province offers more free air conditioners

Forecasters warn B.C. of hot summer, as province offers more free air conditioners
British Columbia's government is tripling a program that offers free air conditioners to people with low incomes as forecasters say the province should prepare for hotter-than-normal temperatures in June. Minister of Energy Josie Osborne told a news briefing that the program, launched last year and managed by the Crown power utility, BC Hydro, had already handed out 6,000 air conditioners and the government was prepared to fund another 19,000 or so.

Forecasters warn B.C. of hot summer, as province offers more free air conditioners

Teenager sexually assaulted in Vancouver

Teenager sexually assaulted in Vancouver
Vancouver Police say a man has been charged after he allegedly sexually assaulted a teenager on a bus in the Mount Pleasant neighbourhood. They say the investigation began two weeks ago when the 15-year-old girl was groped on a bus near the intersections of Broadway and Quebec streets.

Teenager sexually assaulted in Vancouver

Unifor alleges Amazon ramped up hiring at B.C. warehouse ahead of union vote

Unifor alleges Amazon ramped up hiring at B.C. warehouse ahead of union vote
Unifor has filed an unfair labour practice complaint against Amazon amid a vote by workers at a Delta, B.C., warehouse over whether they want to join the union. The union claims Amazon beefed up its workforce as Unifor was in the midst of a union drive to try and weaken support.

Unifor alleges Amazon ramped up hiring at B.C. warehouse ahead of union vote

Man carries knife into North Van school

Man carries knife into North Van school
Mounties in North Vancouver are warning the public after a report of a suspicious man allegedly carrying a knife near a North Vancouver elementary school. Police say the incident took place on May 28th outside Westview Elementary and two callers were reported seeing a man carrying what appeared to be a knife near the school. 

Man carries knife into North Van school

Seizure of 43K & drug bust in Kelowna

Seizure of 43K & drug bust in Kelowna
Mounties in Kelowna say a routine traffic stop led to a search warrant for a home, where police found drugs, 43-thousand-dollars in cash, and two handguns. RCMP say officers stopped a vehicle last Friday and found the driver was known to police, with a history of involvement in the drug trade in the Okanagan city.

Seizure of 43K & drug bust in Kelowna