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State of Environment Reporting
Has
the Range of Caribou Changed?
Population
Status of Caribou


Source:
BC Ministry of Water, Land and Air Protection 2001. Notes: The range
for Caribou was calculated using the estimated historical and current
range. The delineations on the map are sub-populations.
Has
the range of Caribou changed?
- British
Columbia is home to an estimated 18,400
Caribou. The 42 sub-populations of Caribou
vary in size from the Spatsizi herd, with
2,200 Caribou, to the George Mountain
herd, which has declined to approximately
5 Caribou.
- The
provincial status of Mountain Caribou,
which occur in the provinces southeast,
declined from Special Concern to Threatened
in 2000. The same year, Boreal Caribou
in the northeast and Caribou in the southern
two thirds of British Columbia were both
designated as Threatened by the Commitee
on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in
Canada.
- Today
Caribou populations are stable in 16%,
declining in 11% and extirpated in 31%
of their historic range. Demographic trends
are unknown over 17% of historical range.
- Records
from 2002 show an accelerating decline
for Mountain Caribou and 4 southern herds
previously considered stable are now in
decline.
- The
main threat to Caribou in British Columbia
is fragmentation of habitat through logging,
disturbance and natural fires in the north.
Predation, which may be augmented by fragmentation,
also poses a threat.
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