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	<title>The Narwhal | News on Climate Change, Environmental Issues in Canada</title>
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  <description><![CDATA[Deep Dives, Cold Facts, &#38; Pointed Commentary]]></description>
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		<title>The Narwhal | News on Climate Change, Environmental Issues in Canada</title>
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      <title>B.C. government to auction off old-growth in critical habitat for endangered caribou</title>
      <link>https://thenarwhal.ca/bc-old-growth-logging-endangered-caribou-habitat/?utm_source=rss</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://thenarwhal.ca/?p=22739</guid>
			<pubDate>Thu, 08 Oct 2020 20:57:54 +0000</pubDate>			
			<description><![CDATA[The dozen planned cutblocks in the Kootenays will destroy critical habitat for the caribou herd said to have the best chance of survival in the region]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<figure><img width="1400" height="786" src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/End-of-Logging-Road-leading-to-critical-habitat-1400x786.jpg" class="attachment-banner size-banner wp-post-image" alt="Logging road, Argonaut Creek" decoding="async" srcset="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/End-of-Logging-Road-leading-to-critical-habitat-1400x786.jpg 1400w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/End-of-Logging-Road-leading-to-critical-habitat-800x449.jpg 800w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/End-of-Logging-Road-leading-to-critical-habitat-1024x575.jpg 1024w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/End-of-Logging-Road-leading-to-critical-habitat-768x431.jpg 768w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/End-of-Logging-Road-leading-to-critical-habitat-1536x863.jpg 1536w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/End-of-Logging-Road-leading-to-critical-habitat-2048x1150.jpg 2048w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/End-of-Logging-Road-leading-to-critical-habitat-450x253.jpg 450w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/End-of-Logging-Road-leading-to-critical-habitat-20x11.jpg 20w" sizes="(max-width: 1400px) 100vw, 1400px" /><figcaption><small><em></em></small></figcaption></figure><p>Eddie Petryshen was backcountry camping with his brother in the Argonaut Creek drainage, north of Revelstoke, B.C., when they spotted &ldquo;a twinkle of movement&rdquo; on a ridge high above the old-growth rainforest.<p>The next morning, the brothers packed up their tent and followed a stream to the ridge, where they photographed fresh caribou tracks in the squishy mud.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p>For Petryshen, a conservation specialist for the non-profit group Wildsight, the rare sighting in August was a poignant reminder of the Argonaut valley&rsquo;s importance to the endangered Columbia North caribou herd.&nbsp;</p><p>At 147 animals, the deep-snow herd is by far the largest southern mountain caribou population left in the Kootenays, in southeast B.C., and the one with the best chance of persisting in the long term.&nbsp;</p><p>Since 2006, five Kootenay herds have become extirpated, or locally extinct, including the South Selkirk and Purcells South herds, which <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/a-sad-day-two-more-b-c-mountain-caribou-herds-now-locally-extinct/">winked out last year</a> following years of decline.&nbsp;</p><p>The other three Kootenay caribou herds &mdash; the Central Selkirk, Frisby-Boulder and Columbia South populations &mdash; are struggling to survive, with only 26, 6 and 4 animals, respectively, according to <a href="https://www.scribd.com/document/479246701/2020-Caribou-Herd-Numbers-in-B-C" rel="noopener">2020 data</a> from the B.C. Ministry of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development, which was released to The Narwhal upon request.&nbsp;</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/Charlotte-and-Tommy-scaled-e1602185773578-1024x1337.jpg" alt="Logging road, Argonaut Creek" width="1024" height="1337"><p>Charlotte Dawe with the Wilderness Committee and Thomas Knowles with Echo Conservation Society walk the new logging road in the Argonaut valley. Photo: Casey Dubois Media and Echo Conservation Society</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/CaribouTrack_NorthColumbia-e1602185950863-1024x1337.jpg" alt="Caribou tracks, Argonaut Creek" width="1024" height="1337"><p>Eddie Petryshen, a conservation specialist with Wildsight, spotted these fresh caribou tracks when he was backcountry camping with his brother in the Argonaut Creek drainage in August. Photo: Eddie Petryshen</p><p>&ldquo;The North Columbia is the place where we have to decide if we want to keep these caribou or not,&rdquo; Petryshen said in an interview. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re running up against the clock because we&rsquo;re still logging tons of old-growth in their habitat.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p><p>Now the Columbia North herd faces a new threat. </p><p><a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/tag/bc-timber-sales/">BC Timber Sales</a>, the government agency responsible for auctioning off logging permits, has planned 14 cutblocks in or near the Argonaut Creek drainage. Twelve of the cutblocks overlap federally designated core critical habitat for the herd. If the cutblocks are approved, they will result in the destruction of 300 hectares of what biologist Rob Serrouya calls &ldquo;high-quality summer and early-winter habitat&rdquo; for the herd.</p><p>Five of the 14 cutblocks are poised to be auctioned off in the near future, while long-term development will see most of the intact drainage roaded and logged.</p><p>In preparation for logging, the agency recently punched a five-kilometre road through the old-growth cedar and hemlock forest around Argonaut Creek, one of the last remaining unlogged valleys in the area.&nbsp;</p><p>In March, Serrouya, director of the caribou monitoring unit at the Alberta Biodiversity Monitoring Institute, and his colleagues conducted a preliminary analysis for the B.C. government and found that habitat alteration was accelerating for all caribou ecotypes in the province, despite recovery planning.&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;This logging would contribute to that trend,&rdquo; Serrouya told The Narwhal.&nbsp;</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/Upper_Argonaut-2200x1238.jpg" alt="Upper Argonaut Creek, B.C." width="2200" height="1238"><p>B.C. Timber sales plans to auction off most of the Argonaut Creek drainage, with 12 of 14 cutblocks in federally designated core critical habitat for the Columbia North herd. Photo: Wildsight</p><h2>Conservation groups call on province to cancel &lsquo;egregious plan&rsquo;</h2><p>Like other mountain caribou, the Columbia North herd depends on nutritious lichen found on old-growth trees.</p><p>Petryshen, who bushwhacked through the Argonaut valley on his August trip, describes it as &ldquo;rugged, incredible country&rdquo; with inland temperate rainforest &ldquo;like nowhere else&rdquo; and individual trees 50 metres tall, the height of a 17-storey residential building. &nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a place that a lot of people don&rsquo;t want to see logged,&rdquo; Petryshen said. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s one of those drainages where you get a lot of critters because a lot of the [surrounding] landscape has been disturbed. &hellip; It&rsquo;s a pretty wild place.&rdquo;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p>On Oct. 6, Wildsight and seven other conservation groups sent a letter to Deputy Forests Minister John Allan and BC Timber Sales executive director Ray Luchkow, calling on them to cancel the &ldquo;egregious plan&rdquo; to auction off cutblocks in the Argonaut Creek drainage.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/DSCF5499.jpg" alt="Tree marked for logging" width="1200" height="800"><p>Some of the old-growth trees marked for logging in the Argonaut valley are 50 metres tall. Photo: Wilderness Committee</p><p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re at a critical time right now,&rdquo; Petryshen said. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a good time for those blocks to be scrapped.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p><p>The groups are asking the government to fully rehabilitate the new Argonaut valley road to secure habitat for caribou, grizzly bear and other species at risk of extinction. Logging plans call for the road to be extended by another 10 to 15 kilometres, according to the groups, which include the B.C. Wildlife Federation and the Wilderness Committee.</p><p>&ldquo;A new road would increase the access for predators,&rdquo; Serrouya pointed out.&nbsp;</p><p>Human disturbances, including road building, logging and oil and gas development, have destroyed or fragmented caribou habitat and given natural predators such as wolves easy access to herds with disastrous consequences for once-robust populations in B.C. and elsewhere in Canada.</p><p>The ministry said it could not comment on the Argonaut Creek auction by BC Timber Sales. &ldquo;During the <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/topics/bc-election-2020/">election period</a>, all government of B.C. communications are limited to health and public safety information, as well as statutory requirements,&rdquo; the ministry wrote in response to an email from The Narwhal.</p><h2>Only three of 48 B.C. caribou herds have stable populations, new government data shows</h2><p>Unlike six other provinces, B.C. does not have stand-alone legislation to protect caribou and other endangered species. The NDP government promised to enact such legislation during the 2017 election campaign &mdash; a pledge upheld in Premier John Horgan&rsquo;s <a href="https://www2.gov.bc.ca/assets/gov/government/ministries-organizations/premier-cabinet-mlas/minister-letter/heyman-mandate.pdf" rel="noopener">mandate letter for Environment Minister George Heyman</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p>But, once elected, the party <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/b-c-stalls-on-promise-to-enact-endangered-species-law/">reneged on its commitment</a>.&nbsp;</p><p>Endangered species legislation is not mentioned in the 2020 NDP election platform, released on Oct. 6. Instead, the party vaguely says it will &ldquo;work with neighbouring jurisdictions to cooperatively develop and invest in new strategies aimed at better protecting our shared wildlife and habitat corridors.&rdquo;</p><p>The about-face on endangered species legislation comes as new information on the province&rsquo;s 48 caribou herds highlights their perilous status and scientists around the world warn we are witnessing the sixth mass extinction event in the planet&rsquo;s four-billion-year history. Scientists estimate as many as half of all species may be headed toward extinction in the next 30 years, largely due to habitat destruction.</p><blockquote><p>&ldquo;If you have a continuous trend of decreasing, that can only end in one way &mdash; and that is zero animals.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p></blockquote><p>Twenty-eight B.C. caribou herds are projected to decrease in size in the long term, according to a spreadsheet from the Forests Ministry, which lists each herd, the date the herd was last surveyed, the number of animals in the herd and the government&rsquo;s projections for long-term trends.&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;If you have a continuous trend of decreasing, that can only end in one way &mdash; and that is zero animals,&rdquo; said Chris Johnson, an ecology professor at the University of Northern British Columbia who sits on committees advising the federal government on caribou recovery.&nbsp;</p><p>Johnson called the new data on B.C.&rsquo;s caribou populations &ldquo;very sad news.&rdquo;</p><p>&ldquo;[It&rsquo;s] somewhat depressing for those of us who have worked for many years to try to maintain caribou in Canada,&rdquo; Johnson told The Narwhal. &ldquo;But not surprising.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/NRWL030-2200x1472.jpg" alt="caribou mother calf Klinse-za pen" width="2200" height="1472"><p>A caribou cow stands watch over its two-day old calf at a pen in B.C.&rsquo;s Peace region run by the Saulteau First Nations and West Moberly First Nations. Photo: Ryan Dickie / The Narwhal</p><p>Four B.C. caribou herds have fewer than 25 animals, according to the ministry, signalling they are headed toward almost certain local extinction in the absence of immediate and intensive recovery measures. Eight herds have fewer than 50 animals.</p><p>Only three B.C. caribou herds, including the Columbia North herd, have stable populations, according to the ministry.</p><p>The ministry projects that just two B.C. herds &mdash; the Atlin and Carcross herds in the province&rsquo;s far north &mdash; will increase in number in the long term. (A 2019 population estimate for the Carcross herd, last surveyed in 2008, is not yet complete.)&nbsp;</p><p>Joining five Kootenay herds on the lengthening list of local extinctions are the Burnt Pine herd in B.C.&rsquo;s Peace region and the George Mountain herd, whose former hilly habitat Johnson can almost glimpse from his office window in Prince George.</p><p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a classic example, where you see the declines, you see small numbers of animals. You go back, and they&rsquo;re not there. And they don&rsquo;t come back,&rdquo; Johnson said.&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;Small populations typically get smaller faster. So we need to be really concerned about those populations that are less than 25. Those are the ones we could see disappear in a few short years.&rdquo;</p><h2>B.C. government has long track record of sanctioning logging in critical habitat for endangered caribou</h2><p>News about the Argonaut valley auction follows the release of an old-growth strategic review report commissioned by the B.C. government.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p>The report, written by B.C. foresters Al Gorley and Garry Merkel, <a href="https://engage.gov.bc.ca/app/uploads/sites/563/2020/09/STRATEGIC-REVIEW-20200430.pdf" rel="noopener">calls for a paradigm shift</a> in the way B.C. manages old-growth forests and lays out a blueprint for change.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p>The report says old forests have intrinsic value for all living things and should be managed for ecosystem health, not for timber. It also says many old forests are not renewable, which counters the prevailing notion that trees, no matter how old, will always grow back.&nbsp;</p><p>In response, the government announced it will temporarily defer logging in nine areas in the province, but it&rsquo;s <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/bc-old-growth-forest-logging/">business as usual</a> everywhere else.</p><p>One of the largest temporary deferrals from development consists of 40,000 hectares in the Incomappleux Valley east of Revelstoke, an inland rainforest with trees up to 1,500 years old. But Valhalla Wilderness Society director Craig Pettitt said the deferral areas &ldquo;appear to cover a lot of inoperable forest, or forest that&rsquo;s already been clear cut.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p><p>The society said the government should allocate 32,000 hectares of the Incomappleux deferral unit &ldquo;to actual endangered forest elsewhere, instead of protecting inoperable or clear-cut areas outside of the ancient forest.&rdquo;</p><p>In its 2020 <a href="https://www.bcndp.ca/platform" rel="noopener">election platform</a>, the NDP falsely asserts that the nine areas with deferred logging for two years are &ldquo;protected.&rdquo; The party promises to implement recommendations of the old-growth strategic review &ldquo;to further protect old-growth stands.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/oldgrowth_onroad-2200x1238.jpg" alt="Argonaut Creek drainage logging" width="2200" height="1238"><p>Old-growth cedar and hemlock around Argonaut Creek were cut to make way for a logging road. Photo: Wildsight</p><p>The auction of old-growth in the Argonaut Creek drainage, also part of the inland temperate rainforest, is by no means the first time the B.C. government has sanctioned logging in primary forests that provide critical habitat for highly endangered mountain caribou herds.&nbsp;</p><p>From October 2018 to July 2019, the government approved <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/deliberate-extinction-extensive-clear-cuts-gas-pipeline-approved-endangered-caribou-habitat/">78 logging cutblocks</a> in the critical habitat of the Hart Ranges herd in B.C.&rsquo;s interior, allowing industrial logging in an area almost three times the size of the city of Victoria.&nbsp;</p><p>And the government <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/a-dangerous-road-coastal-gaslink-pays-to-kill-wolves-in-endangered-caribou-habitat-in-b-c-interior/">approved the removal or disturbance</a> of 2,750 hectares of Hart Ranges caribou habitat for the Coastal GasLink pipeline, which will supply fracked gas from northeast B.C. for the <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/tag/lng-canada/">LNG Canada project</a>. The pipeline eliminates old-growth forest the B.C. government had set aside for the Hart Ranges herd&rsquo;s recovery and cuts through two designated caribou migration corridors, according to <a href="https://projects.eao.gov.bc.ca/api/public/document/5e459849c981fe0021018fb0/download/CGL%20-%20Assessment%20Report%20for%20EAC%20Decision%20-%2020141008.pdf" rel="noopener">project documents</a>.</p><p>The Hart Ranges herd, estimated to be 408 animals in 2020, is one of the province&rsquo;s most robust caribou populations. But the Forests Ministry predicts the herd, which 10 years ago had 600 animals, will decrease in the long term.</p><h2>Proposed Indigenous protected area offers hope for northeast herds</h2><p>In northeast B.C., the Kaska Dena First Nation aims to create an Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area that would protect caribou and other endangered species, while <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/serengeti-of-the-north-the-kaska-denas-visionary-plan-to-protect-a-huge-swath-of-b-c-wilderness/">helping to preserve the Kaska way of life</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p>The proposed protection area &mdash; which received federal government funding last year but <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/bc-government-kaska-indigenous-protected-area-foi/">needs approval</a> from the B.C. government to proceed &mdash; includes habitat for seven caribou herds. The Rabbit and Frog herds would have 86 and 84 per cent of their habitat protected, respectively. Four other herds &mdash; the Muskwa, Gataga, Horseranch and Liard Plateau &mdash; would have between 24 and 53 per cent of their habitat protected.</p><p>The B.C. government knows little about the status of caribou herds in the region. While it periodically does surveys, it says those numbers represent observed caribou and are not population estimates.</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Lower-Post-0017-2600x1732.jpg" alt="Taylor Roades mineral lick on the Kechika River Kaska Dena" width="2200" height="1466"><p>The proposed Kaska Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area is home to seven caribou herds. Photo: Taylor Roades / The Narwhal</p><p>Two herds whose habitat would be conserved in the Kaska protected area haven&rsquo;t been surveyed since 1999, while the other populations were surveyed between 2004 and 2007. The exception is the Frog herd, which was observed during a sheep survey in 2020, when 114 caribou were spotted.</p><p>The long-term trend for most caribou populations in the proposed Kaska protected area is listed by the ministry as &ldquo;unknown.&rdquo; Only the Muskwa herd is listed as &ldquo;stable.&rdquo; It was last surveyed in 2004, when it had 738 animals, and herd numbers are projected to decrease in the long term.&nbsp;</p><p>Johnson said surveying caribou is often challenging because they are spread out over large areas, including in dense forests.&nbsp;</p><p>The last time the B.C. government surveyed the province&rsquo;s five boreal caribou populations was in 2010. All five populations, which ranged between 79 and 360 animals at last count, are projected to decrease over the long term.&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;We have to assume that they&rsquo;re still decreasing and have to hope that the rate of decrease has not accelerated in the past 10 years,&rdquo; Johnson said. &ldquo;Some will be more stable than others, and it would be helpful to know which are having the most challenges so range planning processes can speed up.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;When we look at the north this is a place where we can hopefully intervene and prevent the drastic declines and extirpations we&rsquo;ve seen in the south,&rdquo; Johnson said. &ldquo;So again, monitoring is important for knowing when these things are starting to tip over the edge and potentially head towards extirpation.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p><p><em>Update Friday, October 16, 2020 at 12:15 p.m. PST: This article was slightly updated to note that the Frog Herd was not surveyed itself in 2020, as previously stated, but was incidentally observed during a sheep survey that didn&rsquo;t expand to the herd&rsquo;s entire range. We owe this clarification to a provincial wildlife biologist who wrote in to tell The Narwhal that the next survey of the Frog Herd is planned for 2021.</em></p></p>
<p><em><strong>The Narwhal’s reporters are telling environment stories you won’t read about anywhere else. Stay in the loop by <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/newsletter/?utm_source=rss">signing up for our free weekly dose of independent journalism</a>.</strong></em></p>]]></content:encoded>
      <dc:creator><![CDATA[Sarah Cox]]></dc:creator>
			<category domain="post_cat"><![CDATA[In-Depth]]></category>			<category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[B.C.]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[B.C. election 2020]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[caribou]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[Endangered Species]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[Indigenous]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[Indigenous protected areas]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[Kaska Dena Indigenous Protected Area]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[protected areas]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[wildlife]]></category>			<media:content url="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/End-of-Logging-Road-leading-to-critical-habitat-1400x786.jpg" fileSize="207951" type="image/jpeg" medium="image" width="1400" height="786"><media:credit></media:credit><media:description>Logging road, Argonaut Creek</media:description></media:content>	
    </item>
	    <item>
      <title>‘No mandate’ from B.C. government for new protected areas: FOI docs </title>
      <link>https://thenarwhal.ca/bc-government-kaska-indigenous-protected-area-foi/?utm_source=rss</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://thenarwhal.ca/?p=22580</guid>
			<pubDate>Tue, 29 Sep 2020 21:24:53 +0000</pubDate>			
			<description><![CDATA[The Kaska Dena have a plan to protect caribou and other endangered species while preserving their way of life, but documents released to The Narwhal show the provincial government cast doubt on the proposed Indigenous protected area while flagging ‘very important’ mining activities and potential loss of revenue for forestry industry]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<figure><img width="1400" height="889" src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Obo-Lake-1400x889.jpg" class="attachment-banner size-banner wp-post-image" alt="Kaska Dena Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area: snow-capped mountains behind a pristine mountain lake" decoding="async" srcset="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Obo-Lake-1400x889.jpg 1400w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Obo-Lake-800x508.jpg 800w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Obo-Lake-768x488.jpg 768w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Obo-Lake-1024x651.jpg 1024w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Obo-Lake-450x286.jpg 450w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Obo-Lake-20x13.jpg 20w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Obo-Lake-e1567202928486.jpg 1920w" sizes="(max-width: 1400px) 100vw, 1400px" /><figcaption><small><em></em></small></figcaption></figure><p>Buying out mineral tenures for a Kaska Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area in northern B.C. could cost $24 million to $40 million, according to documents obtained by The Narwhal that throw cold water on a plan to protect a wildlife-rich area known as the &ldquo;Serengeti of the North.&rdquo;<p>The Narwhal obtained 20 pages of documents about the proposed protected area under freedom of information legislation. All but a four-page letter to the federal government &mdash; about <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/serengeti-of-the-north-the-kaska-denas-visionary-plan-to-protect-a-huge-swath-of-b-c-wilderness/">the Kaska plan</a> for a protected area in part of the nation&rsquo;s territory &mdash;&nbsp;were redacted. In the letter, two assistant deputy ministers said there is &ldquo;no cabinet mandate or commitment by the B.C. government to continue to add or designate new protected areas.&rdquo;</p><p>&ldquo;B.C. is currently unable to commit to establishing new protected areas,&rdquo; said <a href="https://www.scribd.com/document/478009808/Kaska-IPCA-FOI-response" rel="noopener">the November 2019 letter</a>, signed by Jim Standen for the Ministry of Environment and Climate Change Strategy and Tom Ethier for the Ministry of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development.</p><p>But just two months later, then-B.C. Energy Minister Michelle <a href="https://www.canada.ca/en/environment-climate-change/news/2020/01/bcs-central-purcell-mountains-part-of-canadas-largest-investment-in-nature-in-canadian-history.html" rel="noopener">Mungall announced</a> the NDP government was &ldquo;working towards&rdquo; creating the Qat&rsquo;muk Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area (IPCA) proposed by the Ktunaxa First Nation.</p><p>The Qat&rsquo;muk protected area would sit in Mungall&rsquo;s riding of Nelson-Creston in southeastern B.C., as well as in the adjacent riding of Columbia River-Revelstoke, held by the BC Liberals.</p><p>&ldquo;That means at best the government has changed its mind about IPCAs or, at worst, it&rsquo;s being inconsistent,&rdquo; Dave Porter, a senior leader with the <a href="https://www.ilinationhood.ca/" rel="noopener">Indigenous Leadership Initiative</a>, told The Narwhal.</p><p>&ldquo;When Qat&rsquo;muk was announced in January, then-Cabinet Minister Mungall said the agreement was &lsquo;reconciliation in action and it is the right thing to do,&rsquo; &rdquo; said Porter, a member of the Kaska Nation.</p><p>&ldquo;It was the right thing to do then, and it&rsquo;s the right thing to do now and in the future, to work with other First Nations that want to partner with the government to conserve lands,&rdquo; he said.</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Kaska-IPCA-Area-Map-100-1.jpg" alt="Kaska IPCA Area Map" width="1920" height="1098"><p>Proposed Kaska Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area. Map: Carol Linnitt / The Narwhal</p><p><a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/tag/indigenous-protected-areas/">Indigenous Protected and Conserved Areas</a> are gaining recognition worldwide for their role in preserving biodiversity and securing a space where communities can actively practice Indigenous ways of life.</p><p>The Kaska Dena want to conserve a 40,000 square-kilometre area that would stretch roughly, tip to tail, from Lower Post to Fort Ware. The Kaska protected area would surround or connect to six existing protected areas, conserving watersheds and critical habitat for caribou and other species at risk of extinction while creating sustainable jobs.</p><blockquote><p><a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/serengeti-of-the-north-the-kaska-denas-visionary-plan-to-protect-a-huge-swath-of-b-c-wilderness/">&lsquo;Serengeti of the north&rsquo;: the Kaska Dena&rsquo;s visionary plan to protect a huge swath of B.C. wilderness</a></p></blockquote><p></p><p>The Kaska say the protected area is necessary to protect nature and preserve their way of life at a time when Indigenous cultures across the globe are threatened with extinction and when, every two weeks, somewhere on the planet, <a href="https://www.un.org/development/desa/indigenouspeoples/wp-content/uploads/sites/19/2018/04/Indigenous-Languages.pdf" rel="noopener">another language winks out</a>.</p><p>Last September, Kaska chiefs travelled to Victoria to meet with Environment Minister George Heyman, Minister of Indigenous Relations and Reconciliation Scott Fraser and Doug Donaldson, Minister of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development.</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Kaska-land-guardians-2200x1649.jpg" alt="Kaska land guardians Taylor Roades" width="2200" height="1649"><p>Six of the eight Kaska land guardians pose by the Liard River. The aftermath of a 2018 forest fire is visible in the background. Photo: Taylor Roades / The Narwhal</p><p>The meeting came after the federal government confirmed it would provide $587,500 to advance the Kaska protected area, one of up to 27 Indigenous protected and conserved areas supported through the <a href="https://www.canada.ca/en/environment-climate-change/services/nature-legacy/canada-target-one-challenge.html" rel="noopener">Pathway to Canada Target 1 Challenge</a>.</p><p>The Target 1 Challenge is a federal investment in expanding Canada&rsquo;s connected and protected areas to meet the Trudeau government&rsquo;s commitment &mdash; <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/throne-speech-canada-climate-action/">reiterated in the Sept. 23 speech from the throne</a> &mdash; to conserve 25 per cent of Canada&rsquo;s land and waters by 2025.</p><p>The letter from Standen and Ethier, written after the September meeting with Kaska chiefs, described the area proposed for a Kaska protected area as &ldquo;very important for mining and mineral activities which support both local and provincial economies.&rdquo;</p><p>A preliminary assessment indicates the Kaska proposal &ldquo;may impact mineral potential, active mineral title and operations at the Silver Tip mine,&rdquo; near the Yukon border, Standen and Ethier said. Additionally, there are 355 mineral claims and 21 placer claims within the proposed protected area, they stated.</p><p>&ldquo;Forestry activities would be impacted in this area and loss of revenues would not be insignificant,&rdquo; Standen and Ethier said, adding there are more than 46,000 hectares in the timber harvest land base.</p><p>&ldquo;No work under any work plan should assume eventual protection designation,&rdquo; the assistant deputy ministers told Ottawa.</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Good-Hope-Lake-Kaska-Dena-1920x1282.jpg" alt="Good Hope Lake Kaska Dena" width="1920" height="1282"><p>Good Hope Lake in Kaska Dena territory. Photo: Maureen Garrity</p><p>Corrine Porter, executive director of the Dena Keyah Institute, a Kaska Dena non-profit organization, said the Kaska continue to work towards creating an Indigenous protected and conserved area in their territory.</p><p>&ldquo;The Kaska Dena believe they have more than answered concerns raised in the letter over the past year and have no further comments at this time,&rdquo; she said.</p><p>The letter to the federal government also describes IPCAs as a concept that remains &ldquo;largely undefined,&rdquo; a depiction challenged by Dave Porter.</p><p>&ldquo;Far from being &lsquo;undefined,&rsquo; IPCAs are widely known as major, Indigenous-led contributions to conservation and are viewed as an international model,&rdquo; Porter said.</p><p>Three large-scale IPCAs have been created in Canada since 2018, including <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/thaidene-nene-heralds-new-era-parks/">Thaidene N&euml;n&eacute;</a> (pronounced THIGH-den-nay NEN-ay), The Land of the Ancestors, one of the largest territorial protected areas on the continent.</p><blockquote><p><a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/thaidene-nene-heralds-new-era-parks/">Thaidene N&euml;n&eacute; heralds a new era of parks</a></p></blockquote><p></p><p>In the Northwest Territories, the K&rsquo;asho Got&rsquo;&#305;&#808;n&#281; people <a href="https://cpaws.org/kasho-gotin%CC%A8e-and-gnwt-celebrate-new-tsude-niline-tuyeta-protected-area/" rel="noopener">signed an agreement</a> with the territorial government last November to establish and collaboratively manage the Ts&rsquo;ud&eacute; Nil&#303;n&eacute; Tuyeta (Ramparts) protected area to conserve wetlands, nesting grounds and lands of great cultural significance.</p><p>And in 2018, the Dehcho First Nations worked with the federal and territorial governments to create the <a href="https://www.canada.ca/en/environment-climate-change/news/2018/10/first-new-indigenous-protected-area-in-canada-edehzhie-protected-area.html" rel="noopener">Ed&eacute;hzh&iacute;e Dehcho Protected Area</a> and National Wildlife Area west of Yellowknife, in a region known as the nations&rsquo; breadbasket because its caribou, moose, fish and waterfowl have sustained people for millennia.</p><p>One of the earliest co-management arrangements with First Nations was crafted in B.C., where the Haida Nation and the B.C. and federal governments created Gwaii Haanas National Park Reserve and Haida Heritage Site, Porter also pointed out.</p><p>&ldquo;Governments across Canada increasingly recognize that IPCAs and <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/tag/indigenous-guardians/">Indigenous Guardians</a> are effective tools for working together with First Nations to protect lands and waters and which support reconciliation,&rdquo; he said.</p><p>In response to questions from The Narwhal, the B.C. environment ministry said in an email that, &ldquo;Unfortunately, during the election period, government of B.C. communications are limited to public health and safety information, or statutory requirements.&rdquo;</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/Horse-Ranch-Area-of-Good-Hope-Lake-Kaska-Dena-1920x1282.jpg" alt="Horse Ranch Area of Good Hope Lake Kaska Dena" width="1920" height="1282"><p>The Horse Ranch area of Good Hope Lake in Kaska Dena territory in northern B.C. Photo: Maureen Garrity</p><p>At a Sept. 28 <a href="https://www.learningfornature.org/en/topic/session-1-a-global-response-to-our-planetary-emergency-protecting-our-safety-net/" rel="noopener">leaders&rsquo; forum on nature and people</a>, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau emphasized the importance of partnerships with Indigenous Peoples in meeting Canada&rsquo;s conservation goals.</p><p>Trudeau&rsquo;s comments followed the Sept. 15 publication of the <a href="https://www.cbd.int/gbo5" rel="noopener">United Nations Global Biodiversity Outlook</a>, which says the international community has failed to meet 2020 commitments to reverse dangerous declines in animal and plant species. It calls for more emphasis on solutions, including expanding protected areas and augmenting the role of Indigenous Peoples in biodiversity strategies.</p><p>The letter from Standen and Ethier said B.C. had already achieved the Canada Target 1 goal of protecting 17 per cent of terrestrial lands and inland waters, estimating that 20.8 per cent of B.C.&rsquo;s land base qualifies.</p><p>The letter also said there was &ldquo;no cabinet mandate&rdquo; for B.C.&rsquo;s broad participation in the Canada Nature Fund program for new IPCAs &ldquo;as B.C. has not only achieved but has surpassed the target&rdquo; of 17 per cent.</p><p>&ldquo;Notwithstanding this, B.C. recognizes that federal funding under this program does provide capacity and support that assists Indigenous Nations [to] explore their interests in land stewardship and management,&rdquo; Standen and Ethier wrote.</p><p>Among the B.C. IPCA proposals supported by the Canada Target 1 Challenge is a plan by the <a href="http://trtfn.com/" rel="noopener">Taku River Tlingit First Nation</a> to create the Tlatsini &ldquo;The Places That Make Us Strong&rdquo; Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area. The nation is exploring conservation opportunities in its traditional territory including in the Taku, Whiting and Yukon river watersheds, which encompass vast areas of boreal forest and wetlands.</p><p>The letter said B.C. appreciated federal funding to assist the Kaska and the Taku River Tlingit &ldquo;in identifying and developing interests that could come to future land use planning processes,&rdquo; noting the B.C. government was not involved in land use planning with either nation.</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/10/jordan-kaska-land-guardian-2200x1649.jpg" alt="jordan kaska land guardian" width="2200" height="1649"><p>Jordan, a Kaska land guardian, conducts water sampling along the Kechika River in northern B.C. Photo: Taylor Roades / The Narwhal</p><p>The area identified by the Taku River Tlingit contains significant mining and mineral resources, but is &ldquo;less important&rdquo; for oil and natural gas resources, Standen and Ethier noted. A full assessment of mineral potential in the area should be funded by Ottawa, they said, also noting that forestry in the area will require further assessment and analysis.</p><p>&ldquo;Similar to mining and mineral implications, forestry impacts would need compensation for existing tenures and future lost revenues.&rdquo;</p><p>Any assumptions related to a proposed Taku River Tlingit IPCA are &ldquo;premature,&rdquo; the letter said.</p><p>All costs associated with the establishment of protected areas as an outcome of the Canada Nature Fund, &ldquo;should they occur, must be borne by the federal government,&rdquo; Standen and Ethier noted.</p><p>The Qat&rsquo;muk IPCA envisioned by the Ktunaxa Nation also received Target 1 Challenge funding. The Qat&rsquo;muk IPCA would tentatively span about 70,000 hectares immediately north of the Purcell Wilderness Conservancy, including the Jumbo Valley and parts of adjacent watersheds.</p><p>Plans for the Qat&rsquo;muk IPCA advanced in January after development rights were extinguished in the Jumbo Valley, where Glacier Resorts Ltd. had long planned to build a highly controversial ski resort in an area the Ktunaxa hold sacred as <a href="https://raventrust.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/Qatmuk-Declaration-copy.pdf" rel="noopener">the spiritual home of the grizzly bear</a>.</p><p><a href="https://ourtrust.org/qatmuk-protected-for-future-generations/" rel="noopener">Privately held interests and tenures</a> in the Jumbo Valley were purchased through a $16.2 million contribution from the federal government and $5 million from the Wyss Foundation, Wilburforce Foundation, Patagonia, Donner Canadian Foundation and Columbia Basin Trust.</p></p>
<p><em><strong>The Narwhal’s reporters are telling environment stories you won’t read about anywhere else. Stay in the loop by <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/newsletter/?utm_source=rss">signing up for our free weekly dose of independent journalism</a>.</strong></em></p>]]></content:encoded>
      <dc:creator><![CDATA[Sarah Cox]]></dc:creator>
			<category domain="post_cat"><![CDATA[News]]></category>			<category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[caribou]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[Indigenous]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[Indigenous protected areas]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[Kaska Dena]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[Kaska Dena Indigenous Protected Area]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[protected areas]]></category>			<media:content url="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Obo-Lake-1400x889.jpg" fileSize="172510" type="image/jpeg" medium="image" width="1400" height="889"><media:credit></media:credit><media:description>Kaska Dena Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area: snow-capped mountains behind a pristine mountain lake</media:description></media:content>	
    </item>
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      <title>Meet the Kaska land guardians</title>
      <link>https://thenarwhal.ca/meet-the-kaska-land-guardians/?utm_source=rss</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://thenarwhal.ca/?p=13568</guid>
			<pubDate>Wed, 04 Sep 2019 16:33:47 +0000</pubDate>			
			<description><![CDATA[In a wild, roadless area in remote northern British Columbia, First Nations land guardians keep tabs on their traditional territory, including in an area proposed for a new Kaska Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<figure><img width="1400" height="1049" src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Kaska-land-guardians-1400x1049.jpg" class="attachment-banner size-banner wp-post-image" alt="Kaska land guardians Taylor Roades" decoding="async" srcset="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Kaska-land-guardians-1400x1049.jpg 1400w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Kaska-land-guardians-800x600.jpg 800w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Kaska-land-guardians-768x576.jpg 768w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Kaska-land-guardians-1024x768.jpg 1024w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Kaska-land-guardians-450x337.jpg 450w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Kaska-land-guardians-20x15.jpg 20w" sizes="(max-width: 1400px) 100vw, 1400px" /><figcaption><small><em></em></small></figcaption></figure><p><em>This is part 2 of a two-part series on the Kaska Dena&rsquo;s proposed Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area and the land guardians working to protect their culture and traditional territory. Read <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/serengeti-of-the-north-the-kaska-denas-visionary-plan-to-protect-a-huge-swath-of-b-c-wilderness/" rel="noopener noreferrer">part 1</a> for an in-depth look at the proposal and what it means to those who have lived on the land for millennia.</em><p>Zigzagging through the Kechika River rapids in his motor boat, Robbie Porter spots a twist of smoke rising from the boreal forest of spruce and pine. Hands on the steering wheel, rifle in the stern, the Kaska Dena First Nations guide rises from his seat for a better look.</p><p>&ldquo;Maybe a lightning strike,&rdquo; he says over the din of the jet engine. &ldquo;Or maybe a camp.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p><p>Porter, an <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/tag/indigenous-guardians/" rel="noopener noreferrer">Indigenous land guardian</a>, knows the unbroken wild country around the Kechika River in northern B.C. as well as anyone.&nbsp;</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Lower-Post-0048-2200x1649.jpg" alt="Robbie Porter Kaska guardians Taylor Roades" width="2200" height="1649"><p>Robbie Porter, a Kaska guide, stands in front of smoke from a forest fire near the Kechika River. Porter teaches traditional knowledge to the Kaska land guardians, the community&rsquo;s eyes and ears on the ground in their traditional territory. Photo: Taylor Roades / The Narwhal</p><p>Born in the nearby community of Lower Post, the youngest of nine, he spent his early childhood walking ancestral trails and family traplines along the Kechika River, eating smoked beaver and dried moose meat on family treks so long even the dogs carried packs.&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;It was quite the challenge,&rdquo; Porter, a soft-spoken hunter, remembers.</p><p>He watches the smoke as it reaches for the blue sky one moment and bends sideways the next, stretching over a wilderness so vast you could walk for weeks and not cross a road.&nbsp;</p><p>On a clear, windless day in August, Porter is zipping upstream on the Kechika River with anthropologist Gillian Staveley, a Kaska Dena member, and Tanya Ball, head of the Kaska land guardians program.&nbsp;</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Lower-Post-0031-2200x1466.jpg" alt="Kechika River Fire Kaska guardians Taylor Roades" width="2200" height="1466"><p>Kaska land guardians, travelling upstream on the Kechika River in a small motorboat, spot a forest fire and go to investigate. The fire was smouldering at a vacant hunting camp. Photo: Taylor Roades / The Narwhal</p><p>The guardians are the Kaska&rsquo;s eyes and ears on the ground, keeping an eye on land use in the ancestral territory of the Kaska Dena people and using <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/meet-scientists-embracing-traditional-indigenous-knowledge/" rel="noopener noreferrer">traditional knowledge and science</a> to monitor everything from wildlife health to water quality.</p><p>The plan for the day is to show me and photographer Taylor Roades the Kechika River, a key feature in the vast intact region proposed for a <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/serengeti-of-the-north-the-kaska-denas-visionary-plan-to-protect-a-huge-swath-of-b-c-wilderness/" rel="noopener noreferrer">Kaska Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area</a>.&nbsp;</p><p>But now the land guardians have to make an unexpected stop.&nbsp;</p><h2>Guardians find half-burned hunting camp</h2><p>Porter pulls up his 18-foot aluminum boat on a rocky shore in front of the smoke. It&rsquo;s just&nbsp;upstream from the banks of the Red River where his family used to arrive, laden with beaver pelts, in two 30-foot rafts his father had lashed together from freshly cut spruce.&nbsp;</p><p>From the rivers&rsquo; confluence, the family would follow an ancestral trail back to Lower Post, a traditional riverside meeting place that is home to the Daylu Dena Council, representing one of B.C.&rsquo;s three Kaska Dena communities.</p><p>Only steps away from the boat, hidden by a fringe of trees, is a half-burned hunting camp.&nbsp;</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Lower-Post-0054-e1567566341226.jpg" alt="Hunting camp fire Kechika River Kaska guardians Taylor Roades" width="1920" height="1439"><p>The remains of a hunting camp near the Kechika River in the proposed Kaska Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area. Kaska land guardians spotted a forest fire burning by the camp. Photo: Taylor Roades / The Narwhal</p><p>&ldquo;Holy shit,&rdquo; says Ball, as she and Porter pick their way through a 150 by 50 metre area of slippery, steaming ash.&nbsp;</p><p>Porter leaps into the air when the fire, simmering underground through squirrel tunnels, sears the soles of his black shoes.</p><p>A rusty wood stove lies on its side, next to a singed ladle and rusty tin cans. Melted tarps hang from a simple A-frame shelter made from cut trees. A blue plastic mug still dangles from a nail on one of the poles.&nbsp;</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Lower-Post-0062-2200x1649.jpg" alt="Fire along the Kechika River Kaska Guardians Taylor Roades" width="2200" height="1649"><p>In August 2018, Kaska land guardians discovered a forest fire burning at a hunting camp near the Kechika River. Photo: Taylor Roades / The Narwhal</p><p>Pockets of flames pop up here and there. Spruce trees stand tall and surprisingly green above their scorched trucks, ready to topple in a wind without most of their roots. The warm air mists with grit and ash.&nbsp;</p><p>Ball taps a cell phone app, used by the land guardians to monitor land use and flag environmental concerns, to mark the fire&rsquo;s GPS coordinates. She takes photographs to send to BC Wildfire Services.</p><p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s been smouldering for a while and all of these trees are danger trees now,&rdquo; observes Ball, who grew up in Lower Post and went to college in Terrace, where she studied environmental science before working as a GIS technician.</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Untitled-design-46-800x967.png" alt="Tanya Ball Kaska land guardians Taylor Roades" width="800" height="967"><p>Tanya Ball, head of the Kaska land guardians program, stands in smouldering ash from a forest fire the guardians found along the Kechika River. Photo: Taylor Roades / The Narwhal</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Lower-Post-0050-1-e1567566255944-800x967.jpg" alt="Robbie Porter puts out a fire Kaska guardians Taylor Roades" width="800" height="967"><p>Kaska land guardian Robbie Porter uses a tote that held boat equipment to put out a forest fire the guardians spotted near the Kechika River. Photo: Taylor Roades / The Narwhal</p><p>Porter, wearing jeans and a baseball cap that says &ldquo;Born to Hunt,&rdquo; empties a plastic tote of boat gear. He fills it with river water, carrying it up the bank again and again to douse the flames.&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;It might have started last fall and it might have burned underground,&rdquo; he says, wiping sweat and ash from his face. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s not much fuel, dry stuff, around. It&rsquo;s a little wet there. It shouldn&rsquo;t go too far &hellip; I just wonder if it&rsquo;s from the previous fire or from this tent.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p><h2>Guardian program started after poaching and cabin break-ins</h2><p>Porter, who works seasonally for a Yukon guide outfitter, has been running boats and imparting traditional knowledge to Kaska land guardians since the program launched in 2015 in response to concerns about the impacts of accelerated hunting in Kaska ancestral lands.&nbsp;</p><p>The Kechika River, whose lower reaches are home to two woodland <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/topics/endangered-caribou-canada/" rel="noopener noreferrer">caribou herds</a> and Stone&rsquo;s sheep, was an area of particular concern.&nbsp;</p><p>In the Kaska language, the Kechika is Tahdazeh&rsquo;, meaning &ldquo;long inclining river.&rdquo; Its milky grey-green waters are a stark contrast to the Liard River, turquoise and crystalline, into which it flows an hour downstream by boat, not far from the Yukon border.</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Lower-Post-0076-e1567566456603.jpg" alt="Robbie Porter Kaska guardians Taylor Roades" width="1920" height="1439"><p>Kaska land guardian advisor Robbie Porter readies his boat for a trip up the Kechika River. Porter teaches young land guardians the Kaska language and traditional knowledge. Photo: Taylor Roades / The Narwhal</p><p>Close to the rivers&rsquo; confluence is Skooks Landing on the Liard River, which provides access for hunters, especially during the frenzied annual 10-day elk hunting season in September. Ball says cabins owned by First Nations members were getting broken into and moose and other species were being illegally targeted.&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;There was a lot of poaching,&rdquo; Ball says. &ldquo;We&rsquo;d find a moose shot and the antlers taken off &hellip; Sometimes they&rsquo;d be left on [and the moose] not even gutted, just shot and left.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p><p>In 2010, the Kaska Dena Council put up and locked gates on the Skooks Landing access road to restrict entry temporarily.&nbsp;</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Lower-Post-0001-2200x1095.jpg" alt="Kaska land guardians Taylor Roades" width="2200" height="1095"><p>The Kaska land guardians program would have a greatly expanded role in a proposed new Indigenous protected area. Currently, eight Kaska guardians are spread out among the three B.C. Kaska communities. Photo: Taylor Roades / The Narwhal</p><p>Today, the land guardians &mdash; eight in total, spread out among three Kaska communities in B.C. &mdash; patrol highways and access roads to their traditional territory. Trained in conflict management, they approach hunters to see if they will participate in a land use survey, asking questions such as the GPS location of their camp, how many people are in their party and what tags they have purchased. Hunters are also asked to call the guardian program if they plan to leave meat behind, so the guardians can come and pick it up.&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;A lot of people think First Nations are there to kick them out of the land or don&rsquo;t want them there,&rdquo; Ball says. &ldquo;I just want them to see that we&rsquo;re just there to help monitor land use and make sure things are taken care of.&rdquo;</p><p>The guardians also broker relationships with guide outfitters, who would be grandfathered into the new Kaska protected area along with other current users such as commercial trapping. One outfitter donated moose, caribou and mountain goat meat to Lower Post last year, feeding 27 homes, Ball says.</p><h2>Kaska Dena asked for temporary hunting ban after wildfires</h2><p>In August 2018, as the Blue River and Lutz Creek <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/tag/bc-wildfire/" rel="noopener noreferrer">wildfires</a> threatened the Liard and Dease Lake valleys, the three B.C. Kaska chiefs &mdash; along with Danny Case, chair of the Kaska Dena Council, representing B.C.&rsquo;s three Kaska nations &mdash; wrote a letter to Doug Donaldson, B.C.&rsquo;s Minister of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations. The letter served notice of temporary hunting closures in some of Kaska territory, including around the Kechika River.&nbsp;</p><p>The closures would be in effect, the chiefs told Donaldson, until they could assess the situation and make informed decisions on the impact of wildfires on wildlife, which had fled their normal ranges to escape the flames.&nbsp;</p><p>Community members had been pulled away from their regular duties to deal with wildfire impacts and responses, the letter noted. Lower Post, the home of the Daylu Dena Council and land guardians program, had been evacuated.&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;Accordingly, our local governments and land guardians, who play a vital role in overseeing hunting activities in our territory, have been unable to carry out our regular monitoring activities,&rdquo; the letter said.&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;Such monitoring activities are a vital element to our exercise of jurisdiction and authority over resources uses, including hunting activities, in our traditional territory,&rdquo; the letter pointed out.</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Lower-Post-0088-2200x1649.jpg" alt="Kaska land guardian Jordan Taylor Roades" width="2200" height="1649"><p>Jordan, a Kaska land guardian from Dease Lake First Nation, examines a water sample from the Liard River. Photo: Taylor Roades / The Narwhal</p><p>Those monitoring activities include keeping an eye on morel mushroom pickers, who invade the land by the hundreds the year after a wildfire when the prized fungi typically appear. Ball says the guardians hauled out truckloads of garbage from one abandoned camp, including mattresses and signs advertising makeshift restaurants.</p><p>The <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/serengeti-of-the-north-the-kaska-denas-visionary-plan-to-protect-a-huge-swath-of-b-c-wilderness/" rel="noopener noreferrer">proposed Kaska protected area</a> would stretch roughly from Fort Ware, the home of the Kwadacha First Nation, to Lower Post near the Yukon border. At 40,000 square kilometres &mdash; larger than Vancouver Island &mdash; it would encompass snow-tipped mountains, boreal forest, lakes and wetlands. Scientists say the area would provide a refugia for wildlife as the climate warms, with rivers like the Kechika, which begins in the Cassiar Mountains, providing climate adaptation corridors.&nbsp;</p><p>The massive roadless area &mdash; a rarity in the world &mdash; is still home to the full suite of wildlife that populated the area after the last Ice Age, including some of the country&rsquo;s healthiest woodland caribou herds and many other <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/tag/species-at-risk/" rel="noopener noreferrer">at-risk species</a>.&nbsp;</p><p>A new conservation economy would create jobs in ecotourism and other ventures, while extractive industries like mining and logging would take place on the perimeter.&nbsp;</p><p>Back on the Kechika River, Porter talks about some of the changes he&rsquo;s seen on the land over the past decade: lower water levels in lakes and wetlands, less rain, fewer animals.</p><p>&ldquo;You used to go up and down this river and see moose here, moose there,&rdquo; he says. Now you&rsquo;re lucky if you see moose.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p><p>The protected area would reduce pressures on the landscape before moose populations dwindle further and caribou herds become locally extirpated like they have elsewhere in B.C., Porter notes.</p><p>&ldquo;I would say that&rsquo;s a good idea.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p></p>
<p><em><strong>The Narwhal’s reporters are telling environment stories you won’t read about anywhere else. Stay in the loop by <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/newsletter/?utm_source=rss">signing up for our free weekly dose of independent journalism</a>.</strong></em></p>]]></content:encoded>
      <dc:creator><![CDATA[Sarah Cox]]></dc:creator>
			<category domain="post_cat"><![CDATA[On the ground]]></category>			<category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[Indigenous]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[Indigenous guardians]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[Indigenous protected areas]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[Kaska Dena]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[Kaska Dena Indigenous Protected Area]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[Kwadacha First Nations]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[protected areas]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[Rocky Mountain Trench]]></category>			<media:content url="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Kaska-land-guardians-1400x1049.jpg" fileSize="349316" type="image/jpeg" medium="image" width="1400" height="1049"><media:credit></media:credit><media:description>Kaska land guardians Taylor Roades</media:description></media:content>	
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      <title>‘Serengeti of the north’: the Kaska Dena’s visionary plan to protect a huge swath of B.C. wilderness</title>
      <link>https://thenarwhal.ca/serengeti-of-the-north-the-kaska-denas-visionary-plan-to-protect-a-huge-swath-of-b-c-wilderness/?utm_source=rss</link>
			<guid isPermaLink="false">https://thenarwhal.ca/?p=13513</guid>
			<pubDate>Sun, 01 Sep 2019 16:58:49 +0000</pubDate>			
			<description><![CDATA[The First Nations that have lived in the north for thousands of years are out to prove that a conservation economy and extractive economy can thrive side by side — but first they need the B.C. government to get on board]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<figure><img width="1400" height="868" src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Tanya-1-e1567547822881-1400x868.jpg" class="attachment-banner size-banner wp-post-image" alt="Tanya Ball Taylor Rhodes Kaska Dena" decoding="async" srcset="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Tanya-1-e1567547822881-1400x868.jpg 1400w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Tanya-1-e1567547822881-800x496.jpg 800w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Tanya-1-e1567547822881-768x476.jpg 768w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Tanya-1-e1567547822881-1024x635.jpg 1024w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Tanya-1-e1567547822881-450x279.jpg 450w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Tanya-1-e1567547822881-20x12.jpg 20w, https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Tanya-1-e1567547822881.jpg 1920w" sizes="(max-width: 1400px) 100vw, 1400px" /><figcaption><small><em></em></small></figcaption></figure><p><em>This is part 1 of a two-part series on the Kaska Dena&rsquo;s proposed Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area and the land guardians working to protect their culture and traditional territory. Read part 2 to <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/meet-the-kaska-land-guardians/">meet the Kaska land guardians</a>.</em><p>On a rain-soaked evening in early August, Kwadacha First Nations chief Donny Van Somer walks from his home in Fort Ware to an airstrip in town and climbs into a plane. Every seat in the Beechcraft 1900 has a window.</p><p>He buckles up near the front, on the right, near two of his granddaughters and across the aisle from elder Emil McCook, the long-time former chief. A dozen community members squeeze in. Just after 7 p.m., propeller engines thundering, they are airborne.&nbsp;</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Lower-Post-0100-2600x1949.jpg" alt="Kwadacha plane Taylor Roades Kaska Dena" width="2200" height="1649"><p>A Beachcraft 1900, emblazoned with the Kwadacha Nation crest, receives passengers for the 50-minute flight back to Fort Ware. The aircraft is a joint venture between the Kwadacha Nation and Caribou Air. Photo: Taylor Roades / The Narwhal</p><p>Flying north from Fort Ware, an isolated community in northern British Columbia at the terminus of a rough logging road, there&rsquo;s something different about the landscape below. It becomes clearly visible, through parting cumulus clouds and glinting sun, about half-way into the 50-minute flight up the Rocky Mountain Trench, known locally as the &ldquo;warm wind valley.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p><p>Unlike flights over most of B.C., Van Somer doesn&rsquo;t see a single clear-cut. There are no mines, no oil and gas development, no hydro reservoirs, no settlements and not a single road. He could walk for weeks on the land below and not meet a soul in the tapestry of boreal forest, sapphire lakes, rivers and snow-crested mountains that stitch together one of North America&rsquo;s last intact major landscapes.&nbsp;</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Danny-1.jpg" alt="Donny Van Somer Taylor Roades Kaska Dena" width="2560" height="1919"><p>Donny Van Somer, chief of the Kwadacha Nation, at the Kaska annual general assembly in Lower Post, B.C. Van Somer, who lives in Fort Ware, is working to permanently protect part of his people&rsquo;s traditional territory in a new conservancy. Photo: Taylor Roades / The Narwhal</p><p>&ldquo;We have an area that&rsquo;s very pristine and very beautiful, one of the most beautiful places, I think, in the world,&rdquo; Van Somer, a grandfather of 12, tells The Narwhal.</p><p>&ldquo;We call it the Serengeti of the north. There&rsquo;s an abundance of wild animals. It&rsquo;s untouched, no roads, just the ancestral trails that we use for getting back and forth.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p><h2>New conservancy would be larger than Vancouver Island</h2><p>The Kaska Dena call this land Dene Kayeh, which translates as &ldquo;the people&rsquo;s country.&rdquo; The Kaska, a nomadic people who followed the seasonal rounds, producing food, shelter, clothing and medicine from forested landscapes, have occupied this region continuously for at least 4,500 years.</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Obo-Lake-2600x1652.jpg" alt="Kaska Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area Maureen Garrity Kaska Dena" width="2200" height="1398"><p>The proposed Kaska Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area in Kaska Dena traditional territory. Scientists say species will more easily adapt to climate change in areas such as this, where they can move from valley bottom to mountain top. Photo: Maureen Garrity</p><p>In recent times, they have politely declined to put the proposed Eagle Spirit pipeline through their territory, insisted there be no logging north of Fort Ware, negotiated with a Vancouver company that wants to explore for zinc deposits and declined to use their guide outfitting licence because the area has been over-hunted and needs time to recover.</p><p>&ldquo;Now we&rsquo;ve decided we don&rsquo;t want to see much development there,&rdquo; says Van Somer, who is mustached and wears a leaf-patterned shirt in camouflage colours.&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;I think it&rsquo;s very important for us, being First Nations stewards of the land, to protect a piece of the land we can enjoy in its natural state.&rdquo;</p><p>Van Somer is on his way to the annual assembly of B.C.&rsquo;s three Kaska Dena nations. Held in Lower Post, a picturesque riverside community of 150 near the Yukon border, the theme of this year&rsquo;s gathering is &ldquo;protecting our land.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Lower-Post-0097-2600x1949.jpg" alt="Kaska annual general assembly Taylor Roades Kaska Dena" width="2200" height="1649"><p>Friends and family members reconnect at the Kaska annual general assembly in Lower Post, B.C., which brings together people from three far-flung B.C. Kaska Dena nations. Photo: Taylor Roades / The Narwhal</p><p>To that end, the topic of much discussion is a proposed <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/this-first-nation-has-a-plan-to-protect-a-pristine-landscape-in-northern-b-c/" rel="noopener noreferrer">Kaska Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area</a> that would stretch roughly, tip to tail, from Lower Post to Fort Ware, tilted slightly sideways like a jigsaw puzzle piece.</p><p>At 40,000 square kilometres, the new conservancy would be larger than Vancouver Island. You could knit together Jasper, Yoho, Banff and Kootenay parks and still have only about one-half the area the Kaska propose for conservation.</p><p>The Kaska Dena say the plan is necessary to protect nature and preserve their way of life at a time when Indigenous cultures across the globe are threatened with extinction and when, every two weeks, somewhere on the planet, another language winks out.&nbsp;</p><a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Kaska-IPCA-Area-Map-100-1.jpg"><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/09/Kaska-IPCA-Area-Map-100-1.jpg" alt="Kaska IPCA Area Map" width="1920" height="1098"></a><p>Kaska Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area. Map: Carol Linnitt / The Narwhal</p><h2>&lsquo;Mother Earth is taking a beating&rsquo;</h2><p>The conservancy&rsquo;s first priority, according to the Kaska&rsquo;s conservation analysis, would be to maintain healthy functioning ecosystems in the boreal forest, a carbon sink known as the northern lungs of the world.&nbsp;</p><p>Van Somer points to a <a href="https://www.ipcc.ch/2019/08/08/land-is-a-critical-resource_srccl/" rel="noopener noreferrer">report just released by the United Nations</a> Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), which highlights a pressing need to restore and preserve forests amidst the worsening climate crisis.</p><p>&ldquo;Mother Earth is taking a beating and there are certain areas that you have to look after,&rdquo; he says.</p><p>As the world&rsquo;s Sixth Mass Extinction shrinks plant and animal kingdoms, and scientists worldwide warn of a <a href="https://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/blog/2019/05/nature-decline-unprecedented-report/" rel="noopener noreferrer">biodiversity crisis</a> and potential ecological collapse, the full suite of wildlife that populated the proposed Kaska conservancy area after the last Ice Age is still found today in relative abundance.</p><p>That rich assemblage includes some of B.C.&rsquo;s healthiest caribou herds, genetically distinct clusters of Stone&rsquo;s sheep, mountain goats, moose, grizzly bears, orchestras of migratory songbirds, cranes, snowy owls and astonishingly large porcupines that frequent the banks of the Kechika River, known in Kaska as Tahdazeh&rsquo;, meaning &lsquo;long inclining river.&rsquo;</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Lower-Post-0018-2600x1732.jpg" alt="Kechika River Taylor Roades Kaska Dena" width="2200" height="1466"><p>A bend in the Kechika River, called Tahdazeh&rsquo; in the Kaska language, meaning &lsquo;long inclining river.&rsquo; The area would be part of the proposed Kaska Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area. Photo: Taylor Roades / The Narwhal</p><p>A conservation-based economy would create new long-term jobs in land stewardship through an expanded <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/tag/indigenous-guardians/">Indigenous land guardians</a> program and ecotourism ventures.&nbsp;</p><p>Resource extraction, including logging and mining, would take place on the periphery of the conserved area, while current land uses such as guide outfitting and commercial trapping would be grandfathered in.&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;We want to demonstrate how you can have a conservation economy and an extractive economy side by side without losing the values,&rdquo; says David Crampton, a forest ecologist who works for the Dena Keyeh Institute, a Kaska Dena non-profit agency.&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;The fact is, we&rsquo;re adding jobs in areas where there were never any jobs before.&rdquo;</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Lower-Post-0078-1024x768.jpg" alt="David Crampton Taylor Roades Kaska Dena" width="1024" height="768"><p>David Crampton sits near the Liard River in Lower Post, B.C. Crampton, a forest ecologist, works for the Dena Keyeh Institute, a Kaska Dena non-profit agency. Photo: Taylor Roades / The Narwhal</p><p>Crampton, who previous worked for the B.C. forests ministry in the Nelson and Prince George regions, also has climate change high on his mind.&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;With such enormous biodiversity within it, it will protect and act as refugia for a large amount of plants and animals,&rdquo; he says.</p><p>The Kaska Dena vision, announced in June, is quickly gaining political traction. In mid-August, the federal government confirmed it will provide $587,500 <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/biodiversity-crisis-feds-announce-175-million-new-conservation-projects/">to advance the initiative</a>, one of 67 conservation projects supported through the Canada Nature Fund, which aims to expand the country&rsquo;s connected and protected areas as part of the Trudeau government&rsquo;s pledge to double the amount of nature Canada protects.</p><p>Yet the proposal, backed by a number of organizations, including World Wildlife Fund and the <a href="https://www.ilinationhood.ca" rel="noopener">Indigenous Leadership Initiative</a>, can only move forward with provincial government approval.</p><p>Next week, on September 10, Van Somer and two other Kaska Dena chiefs will fly to Victoria to meet with three key ministers: Doug Donaldson, Minister of Forests, Lands and Natural Resource Operations, Scott Fraser, Minister of Indigenous Relations and Reconciliation, and Environment Minister George Heyman.&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re not taking anything away from industry or any other people,&rdquo; explains Van Somer, who has lived in Fort Ware since he was 10, when his parents returned home from Prince George to run the local store.</p><p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re trying to add something for the rest of the world to see. I&rsquo;m hoping that they&rsquo;ll listen. I&rsquo;m hoping that they&rsquo;ll see our goal.&rdquo;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><h2>&lsquo;A very huge impact on the way of life&rsquo;</h2><p>Van Somer&rsquo;s plane skirts Lower Post, veering slightly to the west and crossing the Yukon border to land at the Watson Lake airport. The terminal, with displays of early northern air travel, is deserted.&nbsp;</p><p>Half an hour later, travelling along the Alaska Highway in a shuttle bus, the Kwadacha contingent pulls into Lower Post, a traditional gathering place and former Hudson&rsquo;s Bay post at the confluence of the clear-watered Dease and Liard rivers.</p><p>It&rsquo;s also the site of a former residential school, widely regarded as one of the most abusive institutions in the system, where thousands of children from B.C. and Yukon First Nations were sent and stripped of their identities, including many Kaska Dena children.</p><a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Lower-Post-0024-e1567203019575.jpg"><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Lower-Post-0024-2600x1949.jpg" alt="Kechika and Liard rivers meet Taylor Roades Kaska Dena" width="2200" height="1649"></a><p>The silty Kechika River flows into the crystalline Liard River, creating a colourful contrast near the northern boundary of the proposed Kaska Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area. Photo: Taylor Roades / The Narwhal</p><p>Tanya Ball&rsquo;s mother was sent to the school at the age of six, where she was punished if she spoke Kaska. Today, Ball, a Lower Post resident who runs the <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/meet-the-kaska-land-guardians/">Kaska </a><a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/meet-the-kaska-land-guardians/">land guardians</a><a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/meet-the-kaska-land-guardians/"> program</a>, is learning the Kaska names of trees, rivers, weather and wildlife from a traditional knowledge holder who advises the guardians.&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;My mum did speak it when she was little,&rdquo; says Ball, who plans to take a course in Kaska at a Yukon community college.&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;My grandma spoke it fluently but she&rsquo;s passed. After the generation of my parents it was really lost, and of the elders who speak it fluently there&rsquo;s very few of them left.&rdquo;</p><p>Now the guardians are incorporating Kaska into their land use surveys, so they &ldquo;will start using the Kaska language and hopefully pass on that knowledge to other people,&rdquo; Ball explains.&nbsp;</p><p>The guardians, who monitor land use, build relationships with hunters and use <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/meet-scientists-embracing-traditional-indigenous-knowledge/" rel="noopener noreferrer">traditional knowledge and science</a> to keep tabs on everything from wildlife health to water quality, would be integral to the new conservancy.</p><p>Kaska traditional territory stretches into today&rsquo;s Yukon and Northwest Territories, covering about one-tenth of what is now B.C. Decades ago, the federal government artificially separated the Kaska, a self-governing people with their own laws, into four Indian Act bands in three jurisdictions. They&rsquo;ve lost big pieces of their territory ever since.&nbsp;</p><p>In the late 1960s, with no consultation or warning, the W.A.C. Bennett dam on the Peace River <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/bc-hydro-apologizes-bennett-dam-s-profound-and-painful-impact-first-nations-gallery-opening/" rel="noopener noreferrer">inundated an area 15 times the size of the city of Vancouver</a>. It eradicated traditional Kaska trails, meeting spots, burial places, spiritual and cultural sites and the rivers that tied people to family, friends and other communities. The water rose so quickly that some families lost everything they had, including tools like hide scrapers that had been passed down from generation to generation.</p><p>&ldquo;Williston Lake cut off a lot of the river access,&rdquo; explains Van Somer, whose father was a river freighter and, later, a tugboat captain.</p><p>&ldquo;That was our highway &hellip; There was no way to cross that lake. The trails were gone because the trails were all by the waterways. It&rsquo;s a huge body of water [that had] a very, very huge impact on the way of life.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p><p>With trails and rivers gone, Fort Ware, about 65 kilometres north of the Williston reservoir, was secluded from the rest of the world until a logging road arrived in the community in the late 1970s.&nbsp;</p><p>Today the unpaved road remains the only land access to the community of close to 400 people, which Van Somer describes as &ldquo;one of the most picturesque communities in North America.&rdquo; To get to the general assembly, Kwadacha elders who don&rsquo;t want to fly travel along the logging road for 10 hours in the nation&rsquo;s distinctive white bus, the first leg in their three-day journey.&nbsp;</p><p>Another flight on the Beech 1900, emblazoned with the Kwadacha crest in a partnership with Caribou Air, brings more Fort Ware residents of every age to the gathering, while Dease River First Nation members drive from Good Hope Lake, two hours to the south.</p><p>The general assembly, hosted by a different community each year, is an opportunity to renew friendships and visit with extended family members over meals that include traditional dishes such as moose stew and moose roasts cooked over a campfire, and to discuss pressing matters like the Kaska&rsquo;s proposed protected area.&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;It will never be like back in the day of our ancestors,&rdquo; says Van Somer, whose mother was born on a trapline south of Fort Ware.&nbsp;</p><p>But keeping the cultural and spiritual core of Kaska traditional territory &ldquo;as pristine as we can&rdquo; is a top priority for the community, he says, to have &ldquo;something we can be proud of, something that this generation kept at, without looting it.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p><h2>Ancestral trails a key feature of proposed conservancy</h2><p>Long ago, Van Somer&rsquo;s relatives used to travel north by foot, along a 300-kilometre trail through the Rocky Mountain Trench known as Atse Dena Tunna, meaning path of the ancient ones. The path, thought to have been one of the great migration corridors southward thousands of years ago, links Lower Post to Fort Ware, and is popularly called the Davie Trail.</p><p>The new protected area would revitalize ancestral trails like the Atse Dena Tunna, the centrepiece in a network of trails that criss-cross Kaska traditional territory. Many follow rivers like the Kechika, a silty, 230-kilometre river that begins as a trickle in the Cassiar Mountains, weaving its way through forests of spruce and pine to join the Liard River near the northern boundary of the proposed conservancy.&nbsp;</p><a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Lower-Post-0038-1-e1567203089400.jpg"><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Lower-Post-0038-1-2600x1949.jpg" alt="Gillian Staveley Taylor Roades Kaska Dena" width="2200" height="1649"></a><p>Anthropologist Gillian Staveley, a Kaska Dena member, pauses for a moment at a waterfall near the Kechika River. The peaceful spot, near a mineral lick that attracts big game, has been frequented by the Kaska Dena people for millennia. Photo: Taylor Roades / The Narwhal</p><p>Plans are already afoot to start clearing at each end of the Davie Trail, meeting in the middle, creating jobs based in Fort Ware and Lower Post.</p><p>Anthropologist Gillian Staveley, a Kaska Dena member, describes the Davie Trail as a historic connection among far-flung Kaska communities of the Northern Rockies.</p><p>&ldquo;Coming on the trail from the Finlay River and over Sifton Pass, to the north, the landscape opens up to expose the beautiful and mystic Kechika River Valley &mdash; the heart of the Kaska Dena territory in British Columbia,&rdquo; Staveley tells The Narwhal. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a very special place.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p><p>The Davie trail branches west into the McDame Trail, in the direction of the Stikine watershed and the <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/tag/tahltan-first-nation/" rel="noopener noreferrer">Tahltan First Nation</a>, with whom the Kaska traded the coveted goat skin pants they stitched for salmon and obsidian from Mount Edziza.</p><p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a well-established trail, it&rsquo;s not just a little way-finding wildlife trail through the forest,&rdquo; Staveley says of Atse Dena Tunna. &ldquo;It was used heavily. Even the Northwest Mounted Police used it at some point.&rdquo;</p><p>The Kaska are also working with a consultant on an ecotourism business plan that would create opportunities for their members, &ldquo;who are naturally outdoors people anyway,&rdquo; Van Somer points out. Some will train as outfitters to &ldquo;show people the land, tour them around, guide them.&rdquo;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><h2>&lsquo;One of the last best places on the planet&rsquo;</h2><p>Conservation scientist John Weaver calls the region that includes the proposed Kaska conservation area &ldquo;one of the last best places on the planet.&rdquo;</p><p>&ldquo;The unrelenting expansion and development of industrial activities impacts more and more areas, so there are fewer and fewer intact areas &mdash; especially large intact areas &mdash; left,&rdquo; Weaver says in an interview.&nbsp;</p><p><a href="https://www.wcscanada.org/Publications/Conservation-Reports.aspx" rel="noopener noreferrer">A recent report Weaver authored </a>examines the Greater Muskwa-Kechika area, which the scientist says is no less important ecologically than the renowned Great Bear Rainforest on the north coast, touted by the provincial government as B.C.&rsquo;s &ldquo;gift to the world.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p><p>Weaver&rsquo;s report, for the Canada&rsquo;s <a href="https://www.wcscanada.org" rel="noopener noreferrer">Wildlife Conservation Society</a>, found more than 98 per cent of the Greater Muskwa-Kechika is still intact, &ldquo;a very rare thing in today&rsquo;s world,&rdquo; he notes.&nbsp;</p><p>That means predator-prey relationships &mdash; such as between wolves and <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/topics/endangered-caribou-canada/" rel="noopener noreferrer">caribou</a> &mdash; are largely undisturbed.</p><p>As B.C. caribou herds to the south shrink and disappear &mdash; with <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/a-sad-day-two-more-b-c-mountain-caribou-herds-now-locally-extinct/" rel="noopener noreferrer">two more herds becoming locally extinct</a> this year &mdash; seven caribou herds in the proposed conservancy area are faring much better by comparison.&nbsp;</p><p>Without roads and other linear disturbances creating de facto highways for wolves, caribou, which have evolved over millions of years to spread out on vast landscapes, still stand a chance.</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Lower-Post-0017-e1567203032102.jpg" alt="Taylor Roades mineral lick on the Kechika River Kaska Dena" width="1920" height="1279"><p>A mineral lick along the Kechika River in part of the area proposed for a Kaska Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area. The conservancy is home to the full suite of animals that populated the area after the last Ice Age, including healthy caribou herds. Photo: Taylor Roades / The Narwhal</p><p>Herds in the proposed Kaska protected area have suffered declines but not nearly to the same extent as caribou further to the south, avoiding costly <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/the-caribou-guardians/" rel="noopener noreferrer">multi-million dollar penning experiments</a> where pregnant caribou cows are captured and fed lichen hand-picked by volunteers while wolves are shot from helicopters.</p><p>The Rabbit herd, whose range would be almost entirely preserved in the proposed Kaska conservancy, was estimated at 1,000 animals in 2018. That could be a wildlife spectacle in today&rsquo;s industrialized B.C., which holds the dubious distinction of having more species vulnerable to extinction than anywhere else in Canada, and <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/b-c-stalls-on-promise-to-enact-endangered-species-law/" rel="noopener noreferrer">no provincial law to protect them</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;Caribou from my perspective are almost sacred,&rdquo; says Danny Case, a bespectacled former logger who chairs the Kaska Dena Council, a society formed in the early 1980s to promote and protect Kaska Dena Indigenous rights and title.</p><p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;re wanderers of the land, very much like our people.&rdquo;</p><p>The Kaska conservancy would provide the roadless, unlogged and unmined areas that caribou need, from mountain slopes to valley bottoms. &ldquo;That&rsquo;s critical, that&rsquo;s absolutely critical,&rdquo; Case says.</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Lower-Post-0003-2600x1949.jpg" alt="Danny Case Taylor Roades Kaska Dena" width="2200" height="1649"><p>Danny Case is a former logger who chairs the Kaska Dena Council, a society formed in the early 1980s to promote and protect Kaska Dena Indigenous rights. Photo: Taylor Roades / The Narwhal</p><p>It would also provide connectivity to 14 adjacent provincial protected areas, including the Ne&rsquo;&#257;h&rsquo; Conservancy to the west, tucked between the Cassiar Mountains and the Liard Plains, and the Northern Rocky Mountains Park to the east.&nbsp;</p><p>The Kaska envision a place where people interested in adventure tourism can see the world as it once was, before the juggernaut of industrial development advanced into the far reaches of the globe.&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s critically important to Indigenous peoples, the Kaska in particular, but I think more so to the planet,&rdquo; says Case, who believes the conservancy would become world-renowned.&nbsp;</p><h2>Large landscapes will help wildlife adapt to climate change</h2><p>Weaver, a scientist for almost 50 years, says large intact landscapes like the Kaska proposal offer the best chance for maintaining resilient ecosystems <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/topics/climate-change-canada/" rel="noopener noreferrer">in an age of global warming</a>, heading into &ldquo;this very uncertain future of climate upheaval.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p><p>The diverse topography in the proposed Kaska protected area, from the snowy Rocky and Cassiar Mountains to the surprisingly warm Kechika River valley, gives plants and animals &ldquo;options for the future, for moving around and shifting and finding their new habitat conditions,&rdquo; Weaver says.&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;If they can do that in a very connected landscape so much the better.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p><p>Rivers like the Kechika provide climate adaptation ramps, Weaver says, offering &ldquo;natural pathways that animals will likely follow as they try to get away from the heat and find cooler conditions.&rdquo;</p><p>As the Arctic warms at a rate far faster than the global average, Weaver says some of North America&rsquo;s most likely refugia for plant and animal species will be found in the B.C. and Yukon mountains.</p><p>&ldquo;From that big scale, the M-K [Muskwa-Kechika] is well-positioned to serve as a refuge.&rdquo;</p><p>The Muskwa-Kechika is named after two of the unfettered rivers that flow through its valleys (in Kaska, Muskwa means bear).&nbsp;</p><p>In 1998, the B.C. government designated the <a href="https://www.muskwa-kechika.com" rel="noopener noreferrer">Muskwa-Kechika Management Area</a>, an area roughly the size of Nova Scotia, designed to protect key areas while allowing limited resource development in others.&nbsp;</p><p>Protected areas &mdash; seven in all &mdash; cover just over one-quarter of the management area, while the rest is potentially open to resource development. Even an area called a &ldquo;Special Wildlife Zone&rdquo; allows potential mineral and oil and gas exploration, Weaver notes.&nbsp;</p><p>He says the Muskwa-Kechika Management Area was visionary for its time. But that was before climate change became a global emergency and science showed that existing protected areas are not large enough or connected enough for wide-ranging species, like <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/tag/grizzly-bears/" rel="noopener noreferrer">grizzly bears</a> and caribou, or for the seasonal movements of species, either now or in response to what Weaver calls &ldquo;climate heating.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p><p>The management area also does not protect the headwaters of rivers that flow through the greater Muskwa-Kechika and the proposed Kaska conservancy, Weaver says.</p><p>&ldquo;Water is so critically important to all of us,&rdquo; says Case, &ldquo;and it&rsquo;s critically important to us as a people.&rdquo;</p><p>&nbsp;&ldquo;It&rsquo;s our blood.&rdquo;</p><img src="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Lower-Post-0005-e1567203707972.jpg" alt="Taylor Roades Kaska Dena Lower Post First Nation Sign - Near Watson Lake Yukon in British Columbia" width="1920" height="1439"><p>A sign on the road leading to Lower Post, B.C., near the Yukon border. Lower Post is the home of the Daylu Dena Council, representing one of three Kaska First Nations in B.C. Photo: Taylor Roades / The Narwhal</p><h2>Boundaries designed to minimize potential conflict&nbsp;</h2><p>According to Crampton, the boundaries of the proposed Kaska protected area have been strategically designed to avoid or minimize potential conflict with extractive industries such as mining, forestry and oil and gas.&nbsp;</p><p>There are no active forestry tenures in the proposed protected area, and forestry tenures on its periphery are exclusively Kaska-controlled, he notes.&nbsp;</p><p>Three First Nations woodlot licences will provide jobs in sustainable forestry, demonstrating &ldquo;how you can have a conservation economy and an extractive economy side by side without losing the values,&rdquo; says Crampton. He was first hired by the Kaska in 1993 to respond to proposed forestry activities around Fort Ware and kept working for them, drawn by their land stewardship ethic.</p><p>&ldquo;We have areas where we can do some work, make some money, in a way that is actually looking after the environment,&rdquo; Crampton says in a presentation at the outdoor assembly.</p><p>&ldquo;There is an opportunity for work, and there&rsquo;s also a core area where we can retain the spiritual and cultural integrity of the people.&rdquo;&nbsp;</p><p>Shale gas deposits in the Liard Basin are also outside the proposed protected area, as are active mineral tenures.&nbsp;</p><p>Two active mine tenures, in the southern end of the proposed protected area, are a notable exception. The dominant tenure is held by ZincX Resources, a company that provides jobs for Kaska members in operations south of the proposed protected area, and the Kaska are meeting with ZincX executives to &ldquo;find a negotiated agreement,&rdquo; Crampton says.&nbsp;</p><p>Mining giant <a href="https://thenarwhal.ca/tag/teck-resources/" rel="noopener noreferrer">Teck Resources</a> holds the second active tenure, for lead-zinc development. Reached by The Narwhal, Teck&rsquo;s public relations manager Chris Stannell said the company has not yet been contacted by the Kaska Dena about a conservation area &ldquo;and would be open to discussions about their proposed plans.&rdquo;</p><p>For Case, the area proposed for protection keeps him physically and spiritually alive, helping to maintain connections among Kaska families and community members.&nbsp;</p><p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s so critically important for our people in today&rsquo;s world that we stick together, that we do our best to maintain our ability to grow together, and to take a lot of what&rsquo;s happened in the past and allow for forgiveness to a degree, to be able to live in a certain amount of peace,&rdquo; Case says.</p><p>&ldquo;This particular opportunity provides something that has been the largest question for all our people &mdash; how are we going to protect our land? How are we going to protect what we hold dear, what our ancestors held dear? It really means a lot.&rdquo;</p></p>
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      <dc:creator><![CDATA[Sarah Cox]]></dc:creator>
			<category domain="post_cat"><![CDATA[On the ground]]></category>			<category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[Indigenous]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[Indigenous guardians]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[Indigenous protected areas]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[Kaska Dena]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[Kaska Dena Indigenous Protected Area]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[Kwadacha First Nations]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[protected areas]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[Rocky Mountain Trench]]></category><category domain="post_tag"><![CDATA[solutions]]></category>			<media:content url="https://thenarwhal.ca/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/Tanya-1-e1567547822881-1400x868.jpg" fileSize="375300" type="image/jpeg" medium="image" width="1400" height="868"><media:credit></media:credit><media:description>Tanya Ball Taylor Rhodes Kaska Dena</media:description></media:content>	
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