Environmentalists threaten legal action if B.C. spotted owls' habitat not protected - Action News
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British Columbia

Environmentalists threaten legal action if B.C. spotted owls' habitat not protected

It's estimated that around a handful of the animals remain in the wild in B.C. They thrive in old growth forests prized by the logging industry.

It's estimated just 6 of the birds remain in the wild all in B.C.

A mature northern spotted owl. Environmentalists say its habitat old growth forests need better protections from logging in order for the species to recover. (Jared Hobbs/Ecojustice)

Conservationists are demandingOttawado more to protect the spotted owl, andare threatening legal actionagainst the federal government if it doesn't take more stepsto save one of the most endangered animals in Canada.

Environmental advocate group Ecojustice says that there are an estimated six spotted owls left in the wild in Canada all in B.C. and the animals are at risk of being completely wiped out.

Ecojustice and the Wilderness Committee wantthe federal government to come to the rescue of the birds by committing to a tougherplan for the spotted owl in southwestern B.C.

The group recently senta letter to Catherine McKenna, minister of the Environment and Climate Change, demanding she fulfillobligations to protect and restore species underthefederal Species at Risk Act.

"Time is running out," said Ecojusticelawyer Kegan Pepper-Smith in a release.

"We are looking to Minister McKenna to produce a science-based habitat action plan as soon as possible or Ecojustice and the Wilderness Committee will consider taking legal action."

Northern spotted owls thrive in old growth forests. Environmentalists say their decline is linked to logging. (Jared Hobbs/Ecojustice)

Ecojustice argues that McKenna is required by law to take action under the act, which is designedto prevent wildlife species from becoming extinct.

Northern spotted owls have been defined as endangered since 1986 and are under pressure due to habitat loss.They thrive inold, mature forests and help maintain the biodiversity of those areas.

The birds also face other threats, including competition from other species of owls, the effects of climate change and diseases such as West Nile virus.

Pepper-Smith says logging is mostly to blame for destroying the birds' habitat.

"We should never feel comfortable condemning a species to extinction in the name of short-term economic gain and this is something I don't think anyone would be comfortable putting their name on," Pepper-Smith said.

Ecojustice says in order to restore the species, more old growth forests need to be protected from logging.

Habitat protection

Ecojustice wants the federal government to step in because it says the provincial government has not done enough to help the species byallowinglogging in areas critical for spotted owls.

"If you don't protect the spotted owl's habitat, you're not going to recover the population. It's as simple as that," said Pepper-Smith.

Breeding program

B.C.'s Ministry of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development says it spends $400,000 a year onspotted owls recovery programs.

That money funds the world's only captive breeding program, field research, monitoring and conducting habitat assessments.

A young northern spotted owl chick under the care of the Northern Spotted Owl Breeding Program centre in Langley. The centre says it takes fake eggs, sterile incubators, some trickery and years of trial and error to breed Canada's almost extinct northern spotted owl in captivity. (The Canadian Press)

Meanwhile, this week the captive breeding program for spotted owls in Langley celebrated the birth of a new chick.

The breeding program hopes to restoreB.C.'s wild population to more than 200 adults over the next 10 to 15 years.

The province says as part of its recovery action plan, 303,850 hectares of forests are protected for spotted owls within provincial and regional parks, Greater Vancouver watersheds and wildlife habitat areas.

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story suggested that a recent decision not to immediately log 109 hectares of old growth forest near Juan de Fuca Provincial Park on Vancouver Island could benefit spotted owls. However, the owls have never been found on Vancouver Island.
    May 12, 2019 5:12 PM PT

With files from Canadian Press