Manitoba will join with Nunavut to monitor essential caribou herd - Action News
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Manitoba

Manitoba will join with Nunavut to monitor essential caribou herd

Manitoba is taking part in an inter-governmental survey that aims to shed light on the state of an essential food source for northern communities in Canada's north.

Qamanirjuaq barren-ground caribou herd one of the last to support Indigenous diets

Caribou mingle near Roundrock Lake west of Lac de Gras, N.W.T. Manitoba is partnering with Nunavut to monitor the barren-ground caribou that cross the territorial-provincial border. (Anne Gunn/COSEWIC )

Manitoba is partnering with the government ofNunavutto assess the state of a caribou herd that's an essential food source in Canada's North.

The Qamanirjuaq barren-ground caribou herd is one of the last that Indigenous communities rely on both for economicreasons and for healthy protein.

"By far this would be the biggest source of reliable food," said Eric Reder, a spokesperson with the Wilderness Committee.

"Every community would be harvesting hundreds of animals every year."

Inuit,Deneand Cree nations all look to the herd for a nutritious, low-fat source of meat.

The caribou are "essential," said Reder, giventhat other foods in the North are often processed and shipped long distancesfrom the south.

Caribou have been declining in numbers and slowly migrating further north over recent decades. ( Petter Jacobsen)

In the 1990s, the Qamanirjuaq herd boasted about 490,000 animals, but that number is likely lower now, he said.

"Just like caribou across Canada, this particular population is in decline."

A March 15 order in council says Manitoba Sustainable Development willassist Nunavutin the caribou survey "to ensure the long-term sustainability" of the herd,using scientific aerial photography to assess it.

The province will also support the survey financially.

Monitoring a slow-motion crisis

Human industrial encroachment, climate change and predator populations are among the risks caribou face in Canada.

"Any sort of development can affect populations, predator increases can affect populations, and of course the rapidly changing climate is a really big unknown," saidReder.

Caribou live in a wide range of climates from mountainsto forests and into the High Arctic.

In what's been described as a slow-motion crisis, the animals have slowly been moving further north and declining in numbers in North America.

Last year the barren-land caribou, a subspecies of caribou, were listed as threatened by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada, a group made up of 50 scientists.

The barren-land caribou make up more than a dozen herds, including the Qamanirjuaq, across Canada's territories and the northern Prairies.

with files from Up to Speed