Redfern-Keily
Provincial Park
History
The area was
historically used for hunting and trapping and supplied fur
to the Hudson's Bay Company outposts in Fort St. John and Hudson's
Hope. Knox
McCusker, a dominion land surveyor, measured the snowfields
of the Ulysses group in 1932. The
Bedeaux expedition camped at Redfern Lake in 1934 on their search
for an east-west passage through the Rocky Mountains. Portions
of the Bedeaux Expedition trail still exist in the park.
Efforts to protect
this area have been underway since 1969 when a recreation reserve
was placed around Redfern and Fairy Lakes. Redfern Lake, often referred
to as the "Lake Louise of the north", was designated as
an Area of Interest to the Protected Areas Strategy in July 1993.
The Fort St. John Land and Resource Management Plan (1997) later
confirmed the importance of protected status for this area.
Cultural
Heritage
Redfern-Keily
Park overlaps with the traditional use areas of the Kaska Dena,
Slavey, Beaver and Sekani cultures of the Lower Post, Fort Nelson,
Prophet River and Halfway River First Nations.
Conservation
Representing
the Muskwa Foothills and Eastern Muskwa Ranges ecosections, Redfern-Keily
Park is a diverse 80,712 hectare area of serrated alpine peaks,
glaciers, waterfalls, large valley lakes, rounded ridges and alpine
meadows. The area contains important habitat for a number of large
mammal species including mountain goat, stone sheep, elk, caribou,
moose and grizzly bear. Important fish habitat is also protected
in the park's many rivers and lakes which support populations of
bull trout, rainbow trout and grayling.
Wildlife
The habitat
protected in Redfern-Keily Provincial Park supports numerous large
and small species of wildlife. Wolves, grizzly bears, lynx and other
predators freely range throughout the park's many wide valley meadows
and forested areas. Caribou, stone sheep, moose and other herbivores
can also be found in abundance. Several of the species found in
this park area also identified as either endangered, threatened
or vulnerable. These species include:
- Small-flowered
willowherb (provincial blue list)
- Hornemanns
willowherb (provincial blue list)
- Smooth
draba (provincial blue list)
- Jordal's
locoweed (provincial blue list)
- Porslide's
draba (provincial blue list)
- Marsh felwort
(provincial blue list)
- Grizzly
bear (provincial blue list)
Sensitive
species and habitats found within the park include:
- Mountain
goat
- Free
roaming herd of Plains bison (escaped from an imported herd)
- Stone
sheep habitat
- Elk habitat
- Caribou
habitat
- Moose
habitat
- Fur bearers
- Wolf
Other important
species found in the park include:
- White-tailed
deer
- Mule
deer
- Black
bear
Return to Redfern-Keily
Provincial Park
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