Issues of Caribou Management in Northeastern British Columbia

Woodland caribou inhabit most of Northeastern British Columbia. They live across a variety of climatic and geographic gradients and in areas with as many as seven other ungulate species and seven predatory species. This apparent variability in habitat use may suggest that caribou in the Northeast ar...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Scott Harrison, John Surgenor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Septentrio Academic Publishing 1996-01-01
Series:Rangifer
Subjects:
Online Access:https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/rangifer/article/view/1227
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spelling doaj-509ea91349b24ce69e54fef3bdd001852020-11-24T21:32:20ZengSeptentrio Academic PublishingRangifer1890-67291996-01-0116410.7557/2.16.4.12271157Issues of Caribou Management in Northeastern British ColumbiaScott Harrison0John Surgenor1Ministry of Forests, Research Section; 1011 - 4th Ave., Prince George, British Columbia, Canada V2L 3H9B.C. Environment, Habitat Section; 10003 - 110 Ave., Fort St. John, British Columbia, Canada V1J 6M7Woodland caribou inhabit most of Northeastern British Columbia. They live across a variety of climatic and geographic gradients and in areas with as many as seven other ungulate species and seven predatory species. This apparent variability in habitat use may suggest that caribou in the Northeast are wide ranging and ecologically plastic. Conversely, caribou in Northeastern B.C. may live in discrete groups that have adapted to local conditions. There are few published data of woodland caribou in Northeastern B.C. Information is lacking on the number of caribou, their seasonal movements, their habitat requirements, and their interactions with other species. Logging, seismic activity, pipeline construction, oil and natural gas drilling, hydro-electric dams, and prescribed burning have all impacted habitat in previously undeveloped areas. The manner and rate at which these activities are changing habitats far exceeds our growth in knowledge of caribou ecology. Given this combination of few data and rapid habitat alteration, resource managers cannot know the impact of these habitat changes. We believe that this jeopardises the conservation of viable caribou populations.https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/rangifer/article/view/1227caribouBritish Columbiawoodland cariboumanagement
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Scott Harrison
John Surgenor
spellingShingle Scott Harrison
John Surgenor
Issues of Caribou Management in Northeastern British Columbia
Rangifer
caribou
British Columbia
woodland caribou
management
author_facet Scott Harrison
John Surgenor
author_sort Scott Harrison
title Issues of Caribou Management in Northeastern British Columbia
title_short Issues of Caribou Management in Northeastern British Columbia
title_full Issues of Caribou Management in Northeastern British Columbia
title_fullStr Issues of Caribou Management in Northeastern British Columbia
title_full_unstemmed Issues of Caribou Management in Northeastern British Columbia
title_sort issues of caribou management in northeastern british columbia
publisher Septentrio Academic Publishing
series Rangifer
issn 1890-6729
publishDate 1996-01-01
description Woodland caribou inhabit most of Northeastern British Columbia. They live across a variety of climatic and geographic gradients and in areas with as many as seven other ungulate species and seven predatory species. This apparent variability in habitat use may suggest that caribou in the Northeast are wide ranging and ecologically plastic. Conversely, caribou in Northeastern B.C. may live in discrete groups that have adapted to local conditions. There are few published data of woodland caribou in Northeastern B.C. Information is lacking on the number of caribou, their seasonal movements, their habitat requirements, and their interactions with other species. Logging, seismic activity, pipeline construction, oil and natural gas drilling, hydro-electric dams, and prescribed burning have all impacted habitat in previously undeveloped areas. The manner and rate at which these activities are changing habitats far exceeds our growth in knowledge of caribou ecology. Given this combination of few data and rapid habitat alteration, resource managers cannot know the impact of these habitat changes. We believe that this jeopardises the conservation of viable caribou populations.
topic caribou
British Columbia
woodland caribou
management
url https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/rangifer/article/view/1227
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AT johnsurgenor issuesofcariboumanagementinnortheasternbritishcolumbia
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