Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. To Increase Wolf Cull, Says It's The Best Plan To Save Endangered Caribou

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Sep, 2015 12:21 PM
    British Columbia is aiming to increase the number of wolves it kills this winter in the second year of a plan to save endangered caribou, prompting criticism from celebrities and renewed debate over the controversial strategy.
     
    The wolf cull is the best shot to protect threatened caribou from extinction, say caribou experts and government officials, who admit it will take years to determine if the science behind killing wolves works.
     
    "It's like trying to dial a radio station in with boxing gloves on," said Tom Ethier, an assistant deputy minister at B.C.'s Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations, which oversees the cull. "We're really trying to figure out: does this work?"
     
    The government planned to kill about 200 wolves last winter, but a low snowpack and bad weather made the hunt difficult, he said. Sharpshooters in helicopters killed 84 wolves in B.C.'s northeast and southeast regions, Ethier said.
     
    Wolves are preying on the herds, reducing some caribou in those areas to the point of near extinction, he said.
     
    "We did not meet our goal, so this year there could be more wolves removed," Ethier said.
     
    The South Selkirk caribou herd had just 18 animals in March 2014, down from 46 in 2009, the government stated. There are about 950 caribou in seven herds in the northeast, with wolves responsible for 40 per cent of deaths in four of those herds.
     
    "This is why we need to act," Ethier said. "In five years, we're hoping to turn it around and hoping it tells us this technique works. Obviously, we would prefer choices that are not as striking as this one, and not so loaded emotionally."
     
    The ethical dilemma forces the government to either kill wolves in an attempt to save a species or do nothing and leave the caribou.
     
     
    Both Miley Cyrus and Pamela Anderson have recently criticized the hunt. On Friday, Anderson called on B.C. Premier Christy Clark to find a better solution to save caribou than the slaughter of wolves.
     
    Cyrus travelled to B.C. this weekend to discuss the wolf cull with First Nations in the small central coast community of Klemtu. A video was posted on YouTube of her travelling in a boat with locals and joining them in song.
     
    Earlier this month Cyrus asked her Instagram followers to sign a Pacific Wild petition to stop the killings. The petition has since grown to almost 200,000 signatures.
     
    In response to Cyrus, Clark said she didn't think the American singer knew enough about B.C.'s environmental plan to save caribou herds to be jumping into the debate.
     
    "If we need help on our twerking policy in the future, perhaps we can go and seek her advice," said Clark, who suggested Cyrus stick to her signature dance move.
     
    But conservation scientist Chris Darimont of the University of Victoria said Cyrus is expressing what many people feel about the wolf cull.
     
    "Despite her not being a particularly informed advocate, she's thinking clearly on this issue, and that is probably like many British Columbians, that at a sort of gut level they are opposed to wolf control," he said.
     
     
    Darimont said successive governments have permitted forest, oil and gas and other resource companies to destroy and encroach on caribou habitat, and now that some herds are on the brink of extinction, wolves are made the scapegoat.
     
    "It's a desperate, last-minute Hail Mary attempt to avoid what really ought to be done and that is slow down and stop habitat destruction in caribou habitat," he said.
     
    Since 2007, the province's mountain caribou recovery program has protected 2.2-million hectares of habitat in the South Selkirk, and in 2012 the government protected about 400,000 hectares of habitat in the South Peace.
     
    Alberta government caribou expert Dave Hervieux said a 10-year wolf cull in Alberta worked, but it resulted in the deaths of about 1,000 wolves to save the Little Smoky caribou herd.
     
    "Our assessment was then and remains, that population would be gone now, gone forever," he said. "In that regard, the program has been a success."
     
    B.C. Opposition New Democrat environment critic Spencer Chandra Herbert said B.C. is messing with Mother Nature and animals are being sacrificed.
     
    "I hate it. I wish this didn't exist," he said. "Some government science says maybe it will work, but maybe it's a 50-50 chance. That's pretty crappy odds for a population of caribou."
     
     
    MILEY CYRUS CONFIDENT SCIENCE AND SENTIMENT COINCIDE IN BATTLE AGAINST WOLF CULL
     
     
    Entertainer Miley Cyrus says she knew in her heart that British Columbia's wolf cull was wrong, but after a visit to the province's central coast, she's confident her instincts are backed by science.
     
    Cyrus and her brother Braison spent the weekend around Klemtu, about 600 kilometres north of Vancouver, meeting with wolf biologists Mary and John Theberge and members of the Kitasoo First Nation.
     
    Pacific Wild co-founder and director Ian McAllister says the conservation group led the expedition.
     
    Earlier this month Cyrus asked her Instagram followers to sign a Pacific Wild petition to stop an expanded wolf kill in B.C., and the petition has since grown to almost 200,000 signatures.
     
    In a release provided by Pacific Wild, Cyrus is quoted as saying the weekend visit assured her that science is on her side, not just regarding the wolf cull, but also on the trophy hunt issue.
     
    Cyrus says both the wolf cull and trophy hunts are unsustainable, horrific and must end.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Secretary Panicked When She Found Richard Oland's Body: Son's Murder Trial Hears

    Secretary Panicked When She Found Richard Oland's Body: Son's Murder Trial Hears
    "I saw two legs protruding on the floor. I panicked. I went downstairs to get somebody," Adamson told Dennis Oland's trial in the Court of Queen's Bench.

    Secretary Panicked When She Found Richard Oland's Body: Son's Murder Trial Hears

    NDP, Tories Deal Pre-Emptive Strikes Against Liberals Before Economy Debate

    NDP, Tories Deal Pre-Emptive Strikes Against Liberals Before Economy Debate
    The New Democrats and Conservatives didn't wait for their leaders to take to the debate stage — both parties launched pre-emptive strikes against the Liberals in the run-up to Thursday's leaders' showdown on the economy.

    NDP, Tories Deal Pre-Emptive Strikes Against Liberals Before Economy Debate

    Countdown Begins To The Spectacular 6th Annual DARPAN Extraordinary Achievement Awards

    Countdown Begins To The Spectacular 6th Annual DARPAN Extraordinary Achievement Awards
    Taking place September 18 at Aria Banquet and Convention Centre in Surrey, the Red Carpet rolls out at 6.30pm which will see 700 of Vancouver’s top social and business elite in the South Asian community.

    Countdown Begins To The Spectacular 6th Annual DARPAN Extraordinary Achievement Awards

    11-Year Sentence Means Neil Snelson Guilty Of Manslaughter Will Serve Less Than 2 Years

    11-Year Sentence Means Neil Snelson Guilty Of Manslaughter Will Serve Less Than 2 Years
    Family and friends of a 19-year-old woman who was strangled and beaten to death reacted angrily outside court in Kamloops, B.C., after a judge sentenced her killer to 11 years in prison.

    11-Year Sentence Means Neil Snelson Guilty Of Manslaughter Will Serve Less Than 2 Years

    Victoria Police Investigate Suspicious Death Of 18-Month-Old Girl

    Victoria Police Investigate Suspicious Death Of 18-Month-Old Girl
    Officers were called to a home around 6 a.m. Wednesday to check on the welfare of people inside.

    Victoria Police Investigate Suspicious Death Of 18-Month-Old Girl

    Hailey Dunbar-Blanchette Murder: 'The Loss Of A Child Is The Most Difficult Sorrow A Family Can Bear

    Hailey Dunbar-Blanchette Murder: 'The Loss Of A Child Is The Most Difficult Sorrow A Family Can Bear
    Some quotes about the killing of two-year-old Hailey Dunbar-Blanchette and her father Terry Blanchette:

    Hailey Dunbar-Blanchette Murder: 'The Loss Of A Child Is The Most Difficult Sorrow A Family Can Bear