Elders, trappers from First Nation ask Alberta to protect bison herd - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 29, 2024, 10:07 PM | Calgary | -17.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Edmonton

Elders, trappers from First Nation ask Alberta to protect bison herd

Some trappers and elders from Little Red River Cree Nation in northern Alberta are urging the provinceto protect a dwindling Wabasca wood buffalo herd.

Wabasca bison population at low levels, risk of local extinction

Thirty more wood bison from Alberta have been flown to live in Russia as part of a conservation project.
Alberta says it is looking at all potential measures to conserve and recover the Wabasca bison population, which is at risk of local extinction. (Max Finkelstein/Parks Canada, via the Canadian Press )

Some trappers and elders from Little Red River Cree Nation in northern Alberta are urging the provinceto protect a dwindling Wabasca wood buffalo herd.

In a letter to Environment Minister Jason Nixon, they ask for immediate action to end unregulated hunting by legally protecting the herd.

"Our Woodland Cree Trappers and Elders have seen the Wabasca wood buffalo herd plummet without suitable recovery management actions," says the March 26 letter, which was signed by trappers Johnson Alook, Sylvester Auger and Lorne Tallcree.

"We have not seen more than nine animals at a time of this herd this past season."

A spokesman for Nixon said in a statement Friday that the province recognizes the importance of the Wabasca herd to Indigenous people and other Albertans.

"The Wabasca bison population plays an important role in the conservation and recovery of wood bison in northern Alberta," said the emailed statement from press secretary Paul Hamnett.

"Currently the Wabasca bison population is at low levels and at risk of local extinction. At this time, the Wabasca bison population cannot sustain any level of harvesting."

The statement said the province is looking at all potential measures and actions that could be taken to conserve and recover the population.

The trappers said they have yet to receive a response from the province, but hope officials will take steps to protect the herd before it disappears completely.

"When I started trapping, I used to see 40, 30 buffalo," Alook said in an interview. "For a few years now, I haven't seen any buffalo.

"There's some buffalo out there, but I haven't seen them. I used to see them every time we'd go out there."

Other trappers and elders noticed the same thing, added Auger, so they decided to form a group to express their concerns.

"We want to get them protected," he said.

'At this point it's dire'

Kecia Kerr, executive director for the northern chapter of the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society, said it has worked with the group and shares its concerns.

"There isn't a very good estimate of population size for this herd. But when you are talking about 20 individuals, at this point it's dire," she said.

Kerr said the society would like to see the herd get subject animal status, which is a category that allows for legal protection. It would also like to see hunting become regulated, she said.

"Ultimately, in Alberta, there needs to be a change to how bison are provided status across the province."

The letter says the herd is culturally and ecologically important as one of the few disease-free, free-ranging wood buffalo herds in Canada.

There are only two other healthy herds in Alberta in Ronald Lake and Hay Zama and both have protections that prohibit unregulated hunting.

Watch these bison roam near Waterton

4 years ago
Duration 0:16
Parks Canada is looking to bolster the bison population near Waterton National Park after a successful pilot project near Banff. (Video: Parks Canada)

"The persistence of this genetically unique, disease-free herd is critical to the recovery of the species," says the letter. "It has been our observation that unregulated harvesting targets the largest members of the herd and that when this herd is faced with the threats originating from predators, the largest members of the herd protect the young by forming a protective shield around them.

"Thus, we believe the unregulated harvesting weakens the protective capacity of the herd and has a compounding effect towards herd extinction."

Urgent action must be taken so that future generations of the Little Red River Cree Nation can exercise ceremonial use and have food security from the herd, it says.

"The current situation, as it trends now towards herd extinction, does not uphold the honour and integrity of the Crown in protecting our treaty right."