International Info


Remote Kamchatka faces ecological meltdown as fish stocks are obliterated

Grizzly bear fishes for salmon

A grizzly bear fishes for salmon. Photograph: Daisy Gilardini/Alamy

Sitting in his snug log cabin next to the swirling Bystraya river, Alexander explained when he went fishing.”Sometimes we do in the day. Sometimes we do it at night. There’s no set time,” he admitted, passing round a tub of mouth-wateringly delicious wild salmon and a chunk of brown bread.

“In the winter we dig holes in the ice and fish. We also shoot geese,” he said, showing photos of himself cradling his rifle in a large snow hole, next to his floppy-eared retriever Bzhik.

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Minister Penner Viewing Grizzly Release Preparations July08Minister Penner Viewing Grizzly Release Preparations July08Female Cub Leaving TrapMale and Femal Cubs in WildMale Cub on Stretcher Other photos at http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/gallery/index.html#  

Hi All,

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Ian McAllister’s photo   Ian McAllister photo

Several years ago, the B.C. Liberal government lifted a ban on hunting grizzlies, but critics say the decision was based on faulty science.
<http://www.straight.com  By Andrew Findlay
Publish Date: June 26, 2008
The Zodiac glides along the water, nudging up against the bank of a river that flows into the heart of the Fiordland Recreation Area on the central coast. The passengers step out and wade through a lush estuary blossoming with purple lupines and knee-deep in Lyngby’s sedge, a favourite springtime food of coastal grizzlies. Here and there, the fertile alluvium is freshly overturned where a grizzly has clawed the ground to uncover succulent silverweed roots. A quick scan of the broad floodplain with binoculars reveals two grizzlies methodically eating their way along the forest’s edge, their distinctive shoulder humps shimmering with blond-brown fur. Camera shutters click furiously.
More and more foreigners are paying top dollar for the opportunity to see a magnificent grizzly in the wild. British Columbia, though, still permits the sport killing of an animal that is highly evocative of what remains of our wilderness and is regarded as a keystone indicator of ecosystem health. Last year, a record-setting 430 grizzlies died for sport, for animal control, or from poaching, yet the complex science used by government to establish hunting quotas remains at the heart of one of the most controversial wildlife-management issues in Canada. That’s why environmentalists, First Nations, and bear-viewing companies believe the province is risking international shame over the hunting of grizzlies, considered by the federal Species at Risk Act, the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada, and the B.C. Conservation Data Centre to be a species of special concern.
A recent public-opinion poll that says most British Columbians—73 percent—want the provincial government to end the hunt is adding fuel to the controversy. The poll was commissioned by Pacific Wild, a nonprofit group started last year by Ian McAllister after his split from the Raincoast Conservation Society, an environmental group he helped found more than 15 years ago.

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Governors’ talk on habitat lacks teeth

By JOEL CONNELLY
P-I COLUMNIST

June 15, 2008

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Canadians argue for polar bear huntvar cid=20728884;var partnerID=134726; window.onerror=function(){clickURL=document.location.href;return true;} if(!self.clickURL) clickURL=parent.location.href; var _hb=1; initBtn(1,1,1,1,0,0,’003366′,’000000′);initSponsor(0,’right’,’ ‘,’000000′,’ ‘,’ ‘,’ ‘);initAlt(1,1,1,1);eval(sponFunc);drawBtn(’V',1);  

By Associated Press

WASHINGTON(AP) - Officials from northern Canada were in Washington on Monday to make an unpopular argument: Let U.S. hunters continue to kill polar bears for sport.

The politicians from Canada’s Northwest Territory asked Interior Department officials to allow U.S. sportsmen to still bring back polar bear hides after their hunts in Canada’s Arctic region, despite the increased protection now afforded the bear under the Endangered Species Act.

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Wall Street Journal

Face-to-Face With the Grizzly

Tours to view bears up close in the wilderness of British Columbia are on the rise By CANDACE JACKSON June 21, 2008; Page W3 Nekite Valley, British Columbia

No matter how scary it may look, our guide tells us, if a grizzly bear gets close, don’t run.

As we spot our first bear tracks in the mud later that evening, it’s clear that we’re in bear country now — and there isn’t much to run to. We’ll spend the next few nights in one of the most remote corners of the vast wilderness of British Columbia, a 40-minute seaplane ride from the nearest fishing village at a bear-viewing lodge built on a barge. In the mornings, we’ll rise early to look for the bears, trekking through grassy marshes and boating along shallow inlets in one of the few places where grizzlies still outnumber humans. Our guide is an unarmed biologist.

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Globe and Mail Article – Exclusive by Mark Hume    June 10, 2008Bear Matters Note: please vote for this article at bottom of page at: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20080610.wbcbear10/BNStory/National/home MARK HUME From Tuesday’s Globe and Mail

June 10, 2008 at 4:00 AM EDTVANCOUVER — Seven years after the British Columbia government lifted a moratorium on the sport hunting of grizzly bears, a growing number of people want to see the practice banned again.According to a poll to be released today, 73 per cent of British Columbians support an end to the trophy hunting of grizzlies, a substantial increase from the 52 per cent who were opposed in 2001, when the hunt resumed after the newly elected Liberal government overturned a moratorium imposed six months earlier by the NDP.“That’s a 21-point increase since the moratorium was lifted,” said Ian McAllister, director of a non-profit wildlife conservation group, Pacific Wild. “It was an unpopular decision when the government lifted the ban and it’s even more unpopular now.“The people of B.C. are generally more interested in the environment than they were in the past and I think we’re seeing that reflected in the increased numbers,” Mr. McAllister said of the poll, which was commissioned by his organization. “I think the message here is clear: Just ban the hunt.” Mr. McAllister said he hopes the poll, together with voter pressure during an election year, will persuade the provincial government to reinstate the moratorium.“People are getting frustrated over this issue,” he said. “The government has failed to protect grizzly bear habitat … and people are getting tired of hearing about bears being killed for sport.

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Ian McAllister photo of grizzliesFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:     

JUNE 10, 08 MEDIA CONTACT: IAN MCALLISTER, PACIFIC WILD, Email: info@pacificwild.org ( no affiliation or relation to McAllister Opinion Research) 

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Haida CHN President  Guujaaw

Bear hunt will be last one: CHN president, Guujaaw

http://www.qciobserver.com/Article.aspx?Id=3273&Archive=1 

The trophy bear hunt on the islands underway this summer will be the last one, Guujaaw, president of the Council of the Haida Nation said Friday.
He told the Observer that it’s “an embarrassment” the hunt is continuing, since there was a commitment from the province in 2005 to end it.
“All the way through, we expected the province to come through and fulfill at least a part of their commitment there,” Guujaaw said.
He also says he has “people looking at finding funds” to buy the hunting licences, adding that similar things have happened on the coast with the white bears.
“But it seems to be easier to get people’s attention on the white bear than on our poor little black ones,” he said.
He said the CHN just doesn’t have the money to buy the licences, which he says owner Kevin Olmstead values at $1-million apiece.
“We just don’t have the money. Certainly there is money there, but everybody has their own shopping list,” he said, “there are a lot of things to do, court cases and everything.”
On this being the last hunt, Guujaaw said “this is not our blockade, it is just citizens going out to do it.” But he added “there won’t be a fall hunt because our people wouldn’t allow it.”
“..I don’t think people would tolerate another season. So basically, this will be the last one,” Guujaaw said. He did not elaborate on what that will mean in practice. It could either be buying the licences (the province, the CHN or both) or engaging in protest action to force the end of the hunt.
Licence owner Kevin Olmstead has been trying to sell the licences and the Tlell River House to the CHN since 2004. Last week, he told the Observer the ball was in the CHN’s court. This week, Guujaaw told us “basically, it is his to call”.

 

 

article created May 9, 2008 4:37 PM

Polar BearGLOBAL WARMING: Conference would seek dissenting views.

By TOM KIZZIA
tkizzia@adn.com

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West Coast couple and their children live what they speak
http://www.canada.com/calgaryherald/news/reallife/story.html?id=ef89162d-caf2-42e8-b1fe-c302ec0f0b8f
Kim Gray
Calgary Herald

Monday, April 21, 2008

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MARK HUMEFrom Tuesday’s Globe and Mail E-mail Mark Hume <mailto:mhume@globeandmail.com>   | Read Bio http://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinions/columnists/Mark+HumeBio.html>   | Latest Columns <http://www.theglobeandmail.com/opinions/columnists/Mark+Hume.html> 

April 15, 2008 at 3:57 AM EDTVANCOUVER — A record number of grizzly bears were killed in British Columbia last year, according to new figures released yesterday by environmental organizations.“It’s kind of shocking … very disturbing,” Chris Genovali of the Raincoast Conservation Society said of provincial government statistics that show 430 grizzly bears died in 2007, bringing the total to nearly 11,000 killed in the province since 1975.“I don’t think you can call that a sustainable harvest,” said Mr. Genovali, whose group has long been lobbying for a moratorium on B.C.’s grizzly bear hunt.

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NASCALL RIVER: CASCADE-STUTSLEM VS. PRIMEX INVESTMENTS

Both proposals making their way through system even though they cannot co-exist under 2006 conservation agreement

UNNATI GANDHI
Globe and Mail
April 5, 2008

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Pacific Wild
BELLA BELLA, BRITISH COLUMBIA, Canada, April 1, 2008 –/WORLD-WIRE/–
Two years after B.C. Premier Campbell announced a “historical land use agreement” that was intended to protect Canada’s Great Bear Rainforest, it remains unlegislated. Although the land use agreement was supposed to establish new conservancy boundaries, new large scale industrial proposals are planned within these same areas—leaving the world renowned Great Bear Rainforest under threat once again.

“People across BC, Canada and around the world supported the effort to protect this magnificent forest and applauded Premier Campbell for his visionary achievement,” states Ian McAllister of the BC Environmental group Pacific Wild, “and now we watch in dismay as taxpayer funded environmental assessments take place on projects that should simply be shelved.”

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by Sylvia Dolson, Whistler Question, March 13, 2008Check out www.bearsmart.com/dencam.html  and watch a bear named Rascal as he sleeps in his den in real time.

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