Conservation land in British Columbia gets $11m investment

Conservation land in British Columbia gets $11m investment

Canada is investing C$14.6m ($11m; £8.5m) to set aside 7,900 hectares for wildlife conservation in the Rocky Mountains.

The funding will help expand a tract of land in southeastern British Columbia (BC) already set aside for protection.

The initiative is led by a conservation group, BC and the federal government, and will help protect some 40 species.

Those at-risk species include grizzly bears, wolverines, peregrine falcons, and mountain caribou.

The investment, which comes from both the federal and provincial governments, will mark the 10th anniversary of the largest private land acquisition for conservation in Canadian history by Nature Conservancy of Canada (NCC), a non-profit national land conservation organisation.

Researchers say the land will help preserve grizzly bear habitats in parts of southeastern BC.

The funds cover two-thirds of the eventual cost of purchasing the land and will help add 14% more protected land to the existing Darkwoods Conservation Area, a region of valleys, mountains and lakes that connects to an existing network of wildlife management areas and parkland.

The additional land will improve protection for both wildlife and plant life in the Next Creek watershed region, which lies within the world’s only inland temperate rainforest.

The purchase includes a restoration plan for previously logged portions of the land

NCC BC acting vice-president Nancy Newhouse says the land that will be acquired is “right at the heart” of Darkwoods and will be protected from the threat of industrial or recreational activity.

It is also near the Canada-US border and will help create a protected corridor for wild species to roam.

Darkwoods contains some of the most diverse forests in British Columbia

The entire Darkwoods area is larger than nearby Waterton Lakes National Park in southern Alberta, a 505 sq km (50,500 hectares) park that borders Montana’s Glacier National Park.

Ms Newhouse said the scale of the conservation area – from lakeshores to alpine peaks – “is almost hard to comprehend”.

The public have access to the Darkwoods area between July and September

“You walk into an old-growth forest and there is a depth of smell that is intoxicating,” she told the BBC.

“There’s a mystery around every corner.”

The conservation area helps establish a cross-border wilderness corridor for species like the wolverine
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