Searching for Wolverines in a Vast Northern Wilderness

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Searching for Wolverines in a Vast Northern Wilderness
(June 08, 2018)   -   It was truly like searching for a needle in a haystack: finding an average-dog-size mammal in a vast expanse of boreal forest larger than the state of California. Yet our seven-year effort at the conservation organization WCS Canada to survey the elusive wolverine in the province of Ontario has provided us with a much clearer picture of how this threatened species is faring in its easternmost North American outpost.

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Protecting Whales in an Ice-free Arctic

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Protecting Whales in an Ice-free Arctic
(May 07, 2018)   -   Canadians watched in horror last summer as one North Atlantic right whale after another was found dead around the Gulf of St. Lawrence, washed up on beaches or floating offshore, apparent victims of ship strikes or fishing gear entanglements.  

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Addressing Cumulative Impacts of Climate Change and Development on Freshwater Fish in Northern Ontario

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Addressing Cumulative Impacts of Climate Change and Development on Freshwater Fish in Northern Ontario
(February 15, 2018)   -   Ontario is a Canadian province built on mining and mineral exploration. Over the past two decades, the provincial government has encouraged and facilitated new mines in Ontario’s Far North—a large, remote and largely roadless region that is the homeland for nearly 40,000 First Nations.

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Why Won't Wolverines Cross the Road?

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Why Won't Wolverines Cross the Road?
(February 14, 2018)   -   Wolverine biologist Matt Scrafford spent three winters capturing a number of these wily predators in northern Alberta. The wolverines were then fitted with GPS collars and tracked across an area of the province crisscrossed with logging and oil and gas service roads.

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The sounds of the north: exploring the underwater soundscape of the western Canadian Arctic

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The sounds of the north: exploring the underwater soundscape of the western Canadian Arctic
(February 08, 2018)   -   The Arctic is often viewed as a silent landscape, with few human inhabitants and several populations of hardy polar bears. But while winters are cold, dark, and quiet, summers are bright and noisy, with major migrations of birds and marine mammals.

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What Is Making All That Arctic Noise?

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What Is Making All That Arctic Noise?
(November 03, 2017)   -   After a quarter century living and working in the Arctic, it continues to take our breath away on a regular basis. Mostly it’s the wildlife: a stupendous aggregation of migrating Sandhill cranes or caribou, a beach overflowing with fur seals, a close up encounter with a wolverine. Other times it could be a phenomenal display of northern lights.

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On World Environment Day, Securing a Wild Future for Yukon’s Boreal Mountains

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On World Environment Day, Securing a Wild Future for Yukon’s Boreal Mountains
(June 05, 2017)   -   On World Environment Day, Canada hosts a global celebration of our natural heritage and commitment to protect 17 percent of terrestrial areas by 2020. While this international commitment is a significant achievement, Canada can lead with an even bolder vision to protect some of the last truly wild places remaining on the planet – our northern landscapes.

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The Conundrum of change- By Don reid

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The Conundrum of change- By Don reid
(April 21, 2017)   -   Human beings often have a conflicted view of change. We like certainty and stability. In conservation, however, we have learned that living with certain changes is essential because they create the conditions for many species to thrive. Lately, however, climate warming is creating new and different kinds of changes, often taking place more rapidly than we are accustomed to.

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Bats Are Charged Up for Halloween- Sarah Olson (via Medium)

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Bats Are Charged Up for Halloween- Sarah Olson (via Medium)
(October 31, 2016)   -   Bats have long been associated with the dark and deadly– most infamously in the form of that monstrous prowler of the night, Dracula — in search of fresh blood to feed his thirst and claim new victims. On Halloweens of late, however, it is bats who have had a monster to fear — a real one — that is devastating populations of these flying mammals in eastern North America.

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Planning for Change in One of the Most Intact Places on Earth – Cheryl Chetkiewicz (via National Geographic)

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Planning for Change in One of the Most Intact Places on Earth – Cheryl Chetkiewicz (via National Geographic)
(August 26, 2016)   -   Ontario’s Northern Boreal Forest is a special place. Not only because of its size – which is comparable to Sweden – but also because it remains largely untouched by human development. Now, then, is the time to create responsible planning frameworks for this region which includes one of the most significant chromite deposits in the world.

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