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British Columbia

Unique B.C. caribou feeding program bolstering at-risk population

A unique caribou feeding program north of Prince George appears to have helped a local herd more than double its numbers in the last decade.

10 years ago, there were about 64 animals in a herd north of Prince George; today there are more than 130

How feeding wild caribou is helping a herd recover

8 months ago
Duration 5:33
Retired biologist Doug Heard is helping a threatened caribou herd survive and recover through an experimental program that gets him up close and personal with the wild animals. Catherine Hansen reports.

A unique feeding program for an at-risk B.C. caribou herd appears to havehelped the population more than double its numbers over the last decade.

The program is spearheaded by Doug Heard,a retired wildlife biologist who formerly worked for the provincial government, and takes place in Kennedy Siding, a 223-hectare section of critical habitat for threatened woodland caribou located about 200 kilometres north of Prince George.

The concept is pretty simple.

Heard,or a technician from the McLeod Lake Indian Band,distributes nutritional pellets in a series of covered feeding troughs in the Kennedy Siding area, at the base of the Rocky Mountains, about 30 kilometres southeast of Mackenzie, B.C.

The pellets are a combination of corn and grains optimized for caribou that are, according to Heard, easily digestible and highly nutritious.

Two caribou feed from a wooden box on the ground filled with what looks like raw grain while others mill in the background among evergreens. The wooden box has a wooden shelter roof on top of it.
Caribou cluster around a feeding trough filled with specially designed pellets in Kennedy Siding, B.C., on Nov. 23, 2023. (Catherine Hansen/CBC News)

While speaking to CBCfrom the project site, a couple of caribou casually snack within metres of Heard, although he says some animals are wary of him and other caribou and like to keep their distance.

"I spread out the food and spread out the feeders so different personalities of caribou will all get some food," said Heard. "It appears to be working."

Heard realized about 10 years ago that the Kennedy Siding herd was in trouble and started the supplemental feeding project as a way to help increase the declining population.

Data from Heard shows that the herd had 64 caribou in 2013 and that number has more than doubledto 132in 2023.

"We have an increase in the fraction of calves, so we are getting 25 per cent calves in the population, [which] is higher than average so we know the population is growing," said Heard.

A man stands in dappled sun in front of evergreens and the ground is littered with broken tree trunks and branches. He appears to be in his 60s and has a grey beard. He is wearing a navy blue toque with grey trim, a black jacket and black sunglasses.
Doug Heard retired from his work as a wildlife biologist with the B.C. government a decade ago. He says his post-retirement project, supporting the Kennedy Siding caribou herd, is fun and both personally and scientifically interesting. (Catherine Hansen, CBC News)

According to theMcLeod Lake Indian Band,the Kennedy Siding caribou herd was declining about nine per cent a year before the feeding program began. The band's program website says the Kennedy Siding caribou herdincreased by 16 per centeach year from 2014 to 2022.

The B.C. government has also carried out wolf culling programs in the South Peace region since 2015 to improve survival rates for caribou herds, including the Kennedy Siding group.

According to the Ministry of Forests, Lands,Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development, a total of 1,429 wolves were culled through an aerial reduction program between 2015 and 2022.

The program was renewed for another five years in the winter of 2021-2022.

Theministry says that without predator reduction, caribou herds will continue to decline and be at risk of dying out.

Heard analyzed data after the first six years of feeding caribou andsays wolf removal and his programhavereduced population decline by 16 per cent.

"It looks like feeding is contributing about three per cent of that 16-per-cent growth so it's having some impactit appears and we are doing that by comparing this population to adjacent populations that aren't being fed," said Heard.

Heard is also using wildlife cameras triggered by movement, and photographs to keep track of population numbers and the age and sex composition of the group.

Three caribou stand at a wooden box resembling a garden bed on dirt ground. It has a wood shelter roof on it. One animal is eating while the other two gaze into the distance.
Heard says each animal exhibits a unique personality and while some will feed comfortably in the company of other caribou and people, others are more stand-offish and wary. (Catherine Hansen/CBC News)

He also collects hair and fecal samples so they can be DNA-tested to determine genealogy.

Heard delights in the work, saying it is both personally and scientifically satisfying to work on something withcommunity support and successful results that puts him close to the caribou he so cares about on a regular basis.

"It's just fun to be close to the animals and be able to see the individual personalities and learn new things," said Heard.

Funding for the project comes from the provincial and Canadian government, along with the McLeod Lake Indian Band.

Three caribou stand among fallen branches in dappled sunlight.
Management efforts, such as the feeding program and provincial wolf culls, appear to be improving outcomes for the Kennedy Siding herd. The herd is a woodland caribou subpopulation grouped under Southern Mountain Caribou and is considered a species-at-risk in Canada. (Catherine Hansen/CBC News)

With files from Andrew Kurjata