The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

Biodiversity COP15: the fight of Quebec natives to defend the woodland caribou

2022-12-08T09:27:57.855Z


DECRYPTION - As the COP15 summit opens in Montreal, a delegation of Quebec natives made the trip to defend the survival of caribou, severely threatened by human activity.


Another endangered species.

As the COP15 biodiversity summit opens this Wednesday, December 7, the decline of Canada's caribou population is emerging in the discussions.

In 2003, the government listed woodland caribou as “

threatened

” (species likely to be endangered if limiting factors are not reversed).

Two years later, it was also designated by the Quebec region as a “

vulnerable

” species (state considered precarious but not dreaded to disappear in the short term).

Living in cold and snowy environments of the Canadian Tundra, the species is divided into three ecotypes (hereditary type within a species).

The mountain caribou, which as its name suggests, lives in the mountains.

The migrant, who makes great migrations each year.

And finally the forester, or sedentary, who lives in the forests.

These three ecotypes are today in a “

precarious status

”, warns Daniel Fourtin, professor in the biology department at the University of Laval in Quebec.

Caribou population decline

This precariousness is explained by a considerable decline in the population of the species “

for many years

”.

Near Val-d'Or, in the south-west of the Quebec region, the population would have fallen from 77 individuals in 1952, to only 7 individuals between 2019 and 2020. Same phenomenon on the side of Gaspésie, a peninsula located in the center -eastern Quebec.

In 1983, “

there were 191 caribou, compared to 40 in 2019

”.

Read alsoIn Canada, caribou are endangered

However, Daniel Fourtin insists that the figures for this decrease are very controversial and difficult to estimate.

Each year, the government carries out a census from aerial shots, "

but this is not representative

".

To obtain figures closer to reality, "

it would be necessary to follow the populations closely

", underlines Daniel Fourtin.

Nevertheless, "

it has been proven that all ecotypes are affected by a decline

", adds the specialist.

Hunting then logging: responsible human activity

But why are caribou endangered?

Because of human disturbance,

” replies our expert.

During colonization, the development of towns and hunting gradually pushed the caribou north.

Now it is no longer the problem of hunting because the communities have stopped this practice, but of logging

”.

This pioneering industry in the Canadian economy since the 19th century disrupts caribou habitat.

Read alsoTimber conflict: Canada supports the sector

Cutting trees has several consequences on the survival of the animal.

On the one hand, it reduces the quantity of lichen, the main food of caribou, which is found in the trees and takes thirty years to grow back.

Behind, there are “

hardwoods [birch, poplar] that grow back

”.

But they satisfy the moose more than the caribou, which find themselves without food.

Intense animal predation

Furthermore, logging “

increases caribou mortality

” by increasing the risk of animal predation.

Without trees, these beasts cannot hide from wolves and bears.

Added to this are the "

road networks

" - built by men to cut and take out the wood in order to market it - which "

facilitate access to the forest for predators

".

Read also360 species of large predators to protect on the planet

In the field, Jean-Luc Kanapé, a member of the Innu community of Pessamit in Quebec and land warden in charge of caribou surveillance, sees it every day.

Caribou are sensitive,

he informs,

and are therefore very disturbed by human modification of their habitat

”.

This summer, the Innu researcher discovered “

the corpses of two cubs, killed by predation

”.

"Cultural Genocide"

Faced with this increasingly worrying situation, Jean-Luc Kanapé deplores the inaction of the Canadian state.

The government of François Legault

[premier du Québec, NDLR.]

does not give a damn about caribou,

he denounces.

He prefers to keep jobs in the forestry industry to the detriment of our culture

”.

The only measure put in place was to “

group some caribou in enclosures to protect them from predation

,” reports Daniel Fourtin.

But Jean-Luc Kanapé castigates this practice, fearing that the territory

"resembles a big zoo

".

Indigenous Innu researcher Jean-Luc Kanapé searches for caribou in the Canadian boreal forest in the municipality of La Haute-Côte-Nord, Quebec, August 25, 2022. ED JONES / AFP

Member of a six-person delegation, Jean-Luc Kanapé and his team made the trip to the Montreal congress, where the COP15 summit is being held.

Their objective: "

To make the government understand that there is more important than the votes in the next election

".

"

It's a cry for help to stop this cultural genocide,

he is moved,

it's my dearest wish

".

Daniel Fourtin also calls for action at this summit, with a "

firm commitment to restore caribou habitat

", otherwise, "

all efforts would be in vain

".

Uncertain outcome of COP15

Determined, the Innu indigenous group came to the COP with proposals such as the creation

of “protected logging areas

”.

Daniel Fourtin proposes “

depredation

” as a possible solution in areas where wolves “

are very numerous

”.

It consists of “

killing wolves to reduce the number of predators

”.

Jean-Luc Kanapé already exercises this practice on the territory of which he has custody.

I observe wolves to trap them,

” he explains.

The goal is to balance the species in areas where there are sometimes up to five packs of wolves

”.

Read alsoDifficult context for COP 15 on biodiversity in Montreal

Jean-Luc Kanapé admits all the same that he does not believe in real changes during COP15, but declares

“to do everything we can

”.

Negotiations have stalled at this summit for three years.

And this year, the objective is colossal: to conclude in two weeks a historic agreement in order to protect 30% of the lands and seas.

Although three days of preliminary discussions were held from December 3 to 6 to facilitate the work, no progress was found.

In particular because of the absence of heads of state at the summit, jeopardizing the holding of negotiations.

Source: lefigaro

All tech articles on 2022-12-08

You may like

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.