Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
National

Proposed Small-Scale Moose Cull In National Park Sparks Protest, Confrontation

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Nov, 2015 07:16 PM
    HALIFAX — The head of an organization that represents about 4,000 anglers and hunters in Nova Scotia says a Parks Canada plan to kill about 40 moose in a small section of Cape Breton Highlands National Park is badly flawed.
     
    Ian Avery, president of the Nova Scotia Federation of Anglers and Hunters, said Thursday the experimental cull is a bad idea because the science behind it doesn't add up.
     
    Parks Canada spokesman Derek Quann says the 960-square-kilometre park has too many moose, which are eating so many young trees that the park's boreal forests are being transformed into grasslands that don't support certain species.
     
    "We need to take some action to address the restoration of the forest," said Quann, the park's resource conservation manager. "If not, we're in danger of losing biodiversity and we'll be unable to protect the ecosystem for future generations."
     
    But before it organizes a full-scale cull, the federal agency wants to measure the impact of a small-scale hunt on the vegetation in a 20-square-kilometre area near North Mountain as part of a four-year study.
     
    Quann had arranged for several Mi'kmaq hunters to start killing the moose this week, but the hunt was temporarily called off Wednesday when about 30 protesters entered a restricted zone and confronted the hunters.
     
    "There was an exchange of words," said Quann. "Things were peaceful, though tense and unsettling."
     
    The Mi'kmaq hunters were brought in because the park signed an agreement in 2012 that guaranteed local bands would have the first opportunity to hunt moose in the park. Quann said the hunt will resume later this fall once the hunters' safety can be assured.
     
    Avery said the federation was not involved in the protest, but some local guides and hunters say the cull should be stopped because two harsh winters have left the moose population greatly diminished.
     
    The main problem with the plan for a small-scale hunt is that it ignores the fact that once moose are removed from one area, others will simply move in to that territory, Avery said.
     
    "Without a fence, it's not going to happen," he said. "Moose move around quite freely in the park."
     
    Quann said the population in the zone will be kept in check by subsequent hunts over the next two years.
     
    The long-term plan for the park is to reduce the moose population — estimated at 1,800 — by 90 per cent, said Quann.
     
    The population density for moose in the park is 1.9 per square kilometres, which is roughly four times the level found in other areas where moose live.
     
    Aside from the cull near North Mountain, Parks Canada is also planting trees inside a fenced area near the Skyline trail, and it is getting ready to conduct a prescribed burn in a mixed forest near Warren Lake.
     
    The federation agrees there are too many moose in the park, but Avery says staff should scrap the idea of a cull and instead organize a seasonal, managed hunt that would include offering a limited number of licences to hunters across the province.
     
    That's what happens every year in Gros Morne National Park in western Newfoundland, he said.
     
    "That's a prime example of how a management plan should work," he said.
     
    "We know the moose are doing some serious damage up there. We don't think another two or three years of experiments is the way to go."
     
    Quaan said it's difficult to draw a parallel with Gros Morne because the Cape Breton park has experienced a much higher level of moose-related damage.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Parents Now Advised To Introduce Allergenic Foods Like Peanuts Earlier

    Parents Now Advised To Introduce Allergenic Foods Like Peanuts Earlier
    The review published today in the Canadian Medical Association Journal states that babies at four to six months of age can begin eating these foods.

    Parents Now Advised To Introduce Allergenic Foods Like Peanuts Earlier

    Cost Of Funding IVF In Quebec A Cautionary Tale For Other Jurisdictions: Study

    Cost Of Funding IVF In Quebec A Cautionary Tale For Other Jurisdictions: Study
    And while no live births were recorded for women age 44, the mean cost of failed in-vitro fertilization among this age group hit almost $600,000.

    Cost Of Funding IVF In Quebec A Cautionary Tale For Other Jurisdictions: Study

    Defence In Guy Turcotte Case To Argue For Verdict Of Not Criminally Responsible

    Turcotte has pleaded not guilty to two counts of first-degree murder but has admitted to causing the 2009 deaths of Olivier, 5, and Anne-Sophie, 3.

    Defence In Guy Turcotte Case To Argue For Verdict Of Not Criminally Responsible

    Hungry Bruin Finds Home Among Branches Of Towering B.C. Pear Tree

    Hungry Bruin Finds Home Among Branches Of Towering B.C. Pear Tree
    Residents of the Fraser Valley community have alerted conservation officers after spotting the bear high in the branches of a pear tree about 100 kilometres east of Vancouver.

    Hungry Bruin Finds Home Among Branches Of Towering B.C. Pear Tree

    Why Surrey-Newton Riding Is So Special Of All Electoral District In Canada

    Why Surrey-Newton Riding Is So Special Of All Electoral District In Canada
    Dhaliwal and Singh immigrated from India in 1984 and 2002 respectively. Sims was born in India, raised in England, and immigrated to Canada in 1975 while Sangha was born and brought up in Surrey.

    Why Surrey-Newton Riding Is So Special Of All Electoral District In Canada

    40 Indian-Origin Candidates In Fray In Canada's Federal Election

    40 Indian-Origin Candidates In Fray In Canada's Federal Election
    Forty Indo-Canadians are in the fray in Monday's election to the 338-member parliament on Monday.

    40 Indian-Origin Candidates In Fray In Canada's Federal Election