Sunday, June 14, 2026
ADVT 
National

Wolf culls do not help caribou recovery: study

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Jul, 2020 07:54 PM
  • Wolf culls do not help caribou recovery: study

A study says a government-sponsored wolf kill in Western Canada has had "no detectable effect" on reversing the decline of endangered caribou populations.

The study by scientists from Raincoast Conservation Foundation and the universities of Alberta, British Columbia, and Victoria finds statistical flaws in an influential 2019 report supporting a wolf cull.

New research published in the international journal Biodiversity and Conservation found that addressing potential threats from wolves did not slow the loss of mountain caribou in British Columbia and Alberta.

Instead, it says factors affecting population decline include loss of habitat to logging, snowpack variation and snowmobiling.

The authors point to one type of caribou found across Wells Gray Park and into B.C.'s Kootenay region that suffered the steepest population losses despite having few animals killed by wolves.

The researchers say the effects of the flawed 2019 study have had profound implications because the B.C. government relied on it to expand its wolf cull program, killing 463 wolves over the winter of 2019/20.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. Plane Crash Victim Identified; Witnesses Describe 'Explosion'

GABRIOLA ISLAND, B.C. - Friends are identifying a kind, caring and skilled pilot among those killed in a plane crash on Gabriola Island.    

B.C. Plane Crash Victim Identified; Witnesses Describe 'Explosion'

First Nation Approves Vast Housing Development On Vancouver Reserve Lands

First Nation Approves Vast Housing Development On Vancouver Reserve Lands
VANCOUVER - One of the largest Indigenous-led housing developments in Canada is a step closer to rising in the heart of Vancouver after members of a First Nation voted in favour of the proposal.    

First Nation Approves Vast Housing Development On Vancouver Reserve Lands

Bail Decision On Monday For Montreal Blogger Who Touted Polytechnique Gunman

Bail Decision On Monday For Montreal Blogger Who Touted Polytechnique Gunman
MONTREAL - A decision on whether to grant bail to a Montreal blogger alleged to have glorified the gunman behind Montreal's 1989 Ecole polytechnique killings is expected Monday.    

Bail Decision On Monday For Montreal Blogger Who Touted Polytechnique Gunman

Alberta's High Court Won't Change Life Sentence Of Man Who Killed Seniors

Alberta's High Court Won't Change Life Sentence Of Man Who Killed Seniors
EDMONTON - The Alberta Court of Appeal has dismissed a sentence appeal of a man convicted of killing two Edmonton-area seniors.    

Alberta's High Court Won't Change Life Sentence Of Man Who Killed Seniors

Legault Defends Telling California Governor All French-Canadians Are Catholic

SACRAMENTO, United States - Quebec Premier Francois Legault is defending comments made Wednesday to the governor of California in which he declared all French-Canadians are Catholic.    

Legault Defends Telling California Governor All French-Canadians Are Catholic

Ontario Passes Bill To Join Opioid Class-Action Lawsuit Launched By BC

Ontario Passes Bill To Join Opioid Class-Action Lawsuit Launched By BC
TORONTO - Ontario is joining five other provinces in a class-action lawsuit against dozens of opioid manufacturers.    

Ontario Passes Bill To Join Opioid Class-Action Lawsuit Launched By BC