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GoatGuy
06-01-2010, 03:20 PM
Imminent Extinctions of Woodland Caribou from
National Parks

Conservation Biology
Volume 24, No. 2, 2010

Mountain caribou (Rangifer tarandus caribou) have
been critically endangered in Banff National Park (BNP)
for at least 15 years, and their extinction from the area is
not surprising (Hebblewhite et al. 2010). This situation
is disheartening because national parks are supposed to
provide refugia for threatened species and to safeguard
them for future generations. Inaction has failed both caribou
and concerned citizens. It is critical, therefore, to
understand why the system failed because no amount of
hard work researching the ecosystem will save species if
suggested recovery strategies are not implemented.
Hebblewhite et al. (2010) provide three hypotheses
as to why mandated actions under Canada’s Species at
Risk Act (SARA) proceeded more slowly on national park
lands than the provincial land in British Columbia and
Alberta, which also support mountain caribou: (1) recent
consensus among scientists of the pervasiveness of
top–down predator–prey interactions and the large areas
over which they may occur, (2) stakeholders and
managers were unaware or did not accept these findings
as reliable scientific knowledge, and (3) senior wildlife
managers perceived no political consensus for caribou
conservation within national parks.
We tested the universal nature of these hypotheses in
Mount Revelstoke and Glacier National Parks (MRGNP),
located 90 km west of BNP. Unlike BNP, which is part of
a 29,232-km2 block of protected areas but is still too small
to contain an intact predator–prey system of large mammals
(Hebblewhite et al. 2010),MRGNP covers only 1609
km2. Also unlike BNP, a coordinated Parks Canada and
Province of British Columbia telemetry-based research
project on caribou was initiated in the MRGNP area in
1992 (in BNP there was little effort to learn about caribou
until there were only five animals left in 2002; Hebblewhite
et al. 2010). The population that includes MRGNP
was estimated to have 121 (90% CL 106–161) caribou
in 1994, of which 71 were observed within MRGNP.
Over the course of nine censuses, the number of animals
steadily declined to 13 by 2009, eight of which were
seen inside MRGNP (Furk & Flaa 2009). Parks Canada is
well aware of the rate of decline and knows that unless
management actions are applied the extinction of these
animals is imminent.
We reject Hebblewhite et al.’s (2010) first hypothesis
because the implications of apparent competition on
woodland caribou have been documented for decades
(e.g., Bergerud 1974; Seip 1992; Wittmer et al. 2005). On
the basis of available evidence, conservation actions have
been implemented on public land in British Columbia and
Alberta (B.C. Ministry of Environment 2009). Hypothesis
2 can, for the most part, be rejected. Parks Canada managers,
like their provincial counterparts, were aware of
apparent competition and the impact it was having on
caribou. For example, Parks Canada managers were involved
in developing the initial recovery plan for mountain
caribou in British Columbia (Hatter et al. 2002), and
this plan recognized apparent competition as a proximate
factor in their decline. We agree with hypothesis 3. Senior
park managers perceived no political consensus for
caribou conservation within national parks because of
the difficulty of integrating caribou conservation, which
requires active population management, with the less interventionist
approach often usedwithin protected areas.
Mountain caribou recovery will involve actions that
will be highly unpopular with some people. Actions to
conserve caribou will include reducing forest harvesting,
mechanized recreation, and the numbers of alternative
prey and predators until after the early-seral stage of
succession. Currently early-seral conditions are abundant

GoatGuy
06-01-2010, 03:21 PM
and favor high numbers of alternative prey and predators.
Once the proximate cause of caribou decline (too many
alternative prey and predators) is corrected, population
augmentation will likely be required. Provincial governments
are mandated to actively manage all these factors in
a culture of active management. In comparison, it is mandated
that the forests, prey, and predators in protected
areas not be managed (notable exceptions include prescribed
burning in dry ecosystems). The MRGNP’s stated
opinion, even in small parks, is that “predation is considered
to be a natural and important process, necessary
to retaining ecological integrity within an ecosystem”
(MRGNP 2008). Similarly, MRGNP does not support the
use of maternity penning in the park (MRGNP 2008), a
method that protects mothers and their calves for one
month, after which the risk of predation on calves decreases
substantially.
To permit extinction in an ecosystem that has been
changed drastically because of preserved natural processes
at small scales may not be acceptable to citizens
who entrust species survival to managers of protected
areas. Once the caribou are gone (and they will
be in MRGNP without active management [Wittmer et al.
2009]), then the immediate impetus for not harvesting
large areas of primary forests outside the park is gone.
The ramification of “preserving natural processes” on a
small scale and letting extinction happen in protected
areas may result in large-scale ecological changes associated
with the likelihood of increased forest harvesting
outside national parks.
Robert Serrouya∗ and Heiko U. Wittmer†
∗University of Alberta, Department of Biological Sciences, Edmonton,
AB T6G 2E9, Canada, email serrouya@ualberta.ca
†Wildlife, Fish, and Conservation Biology, University of California,
Davis, CA 95616, U.S.A.
Literature cited
B.C. (British Columbia) Ministry of Environment. 2009. Mountain caribou
recovery implementation plan. Update to the mountain caribou
progress board. B.C. Ministry of Environment, Victoria. Available
from http://www.env.gov.bc.ca/sarco/mc/files/progress_board_
update20090213.pdf (accessed November 2009).
Bergerud, A. T. 1974. Decline of caribou in North America following
settlement. Journal of Wildlife Management 38:757–770.
Furk, K. and J. P. Flaa. 2009. Population censuses of caribou in the
north ColumbiaMountains, Columbia South subpopulation. Report.
Mount Revelstoke and Glacier National Parks, Revelstoke, British
Columbia, Canada.
Hatter et al. 2002. A strategy for the recovery of mountain caribou in
British Columbia. British Columbia Ministry of Water, Land, and Air
Protection, Victoria.
Hebblewhite, M., C. White, and M. Musiani. 2010. Revisiting extinction
in national parks: mountain caribou in Banff. Conservation Biology
21:341–344.
MRGNP (Mount Revelstoke and Glacier National Parks). 2008. Letter to
British Columbia Ministry of Environment. 11 June 2008. MRGNP,
Revelstoke, British Columbia, Canada.
Seip, D.R. 1992. Factors limiting woodland caribou populations and
their interrelationships with wolves and moose in southeastern
British Columbia. Canadian Journal of Zoology 70:1494–1503.
Wittmer, H.U., R.N.M. Ahrens, and B.N. McLellan. 2010. Viability of
mountain caribou in British Columbia, Canada: effects of habitat
change and population density. Biological Conservation 143:86–
93.
Wittmer, H. U., A. R. E. Sinclair, and B.N. McLellan. 2005. The role
of predation in the decline and extirpation of woodland caribou.
Oecologia 144:257–267.

Surrey Boy
06-01-2010, 04:17 PM
Good article. What Fort Langley yuppy will read it, and which emo-drama student will believe it? They seem to have all the say in things.

GoatGuy
06-01-2010, 04:20 PM
Good article. What Fort Langley yuppy will read it, and which emo-drama student will believe it? They seem to have all the say in things.


Yep, it's a bit of a joke really.