Skip to main content
About Us
Our Impact
Staff
Board
Contact Us
Our work
Global
National
Wildlife
Wild Places
Indigenous Communities and Conservation
Project Websites
Alberta Community Bat Program
Arctic Noise
Key Biodiversity Areas (KBA) Canada
Learning from Lake Sturgeon
Ring of Fire
SHAPE of Nature
WCS Canada Bats
Yukon Climate Change Adaptation
News
Latest News
e-Newsletter
Muddy Boots Blog
External Blogs
Radio and Podcasts
Publications
Library Search
Journal Articles
Conservation Reports
Policy Comments
Story maps & Data
Annual Reports
Financial Reports
Opportunities
Fellowships
Careers
Support Us
Donor Impact
Ways to Give
Legacy Gifts
Other Ways to Help
Donate
Wild at Heart
search
Donate
Menu
Enhancing the protection of fish and fish habitat in Canada: A critical opportunity to breathe new life into failing policy
Views: 4118
(March 27, 2017)
Although fish and fisheries are an integral part of Canada’s history, culture, and economy, protection for fish and fish habitats has been declining in Canada for at least a decade. The Fisheries Act is Canada’s oldest environmental law and an important piece of legislation that gives the Government of Canada the authority to manage fisheries and protect fish habitat. However to be effective, the Fisheries Act must be modernized, include evidence-based a...
READ THE STORY
Posted in:
News Item
Big Bat Find in Alberta’s Boreal Forest
Views: 3496
(March 22, 2017)
A joint effort between WCS Canada’s BatCaver and Alberta Environment and Parks has led to the discovery of the largest bat hibernation cave ever recorded in Alberta, outside the Rocky Mountains.The newly-discovered cave is being used for hibernation by several hundred Little Brown Myotis bats, listed as Endangered under Canada’s Species at Risk Act. The cave was formed by weak sulphuric acid dissolving bedrock, making conditions in the narrow, muddy cave impossible to fully inspect h...
READ THE STORY
Posted in:
News Item
Big Bat Find in Alberta’s Boreal Forest
Views: 3147
(March 16, 2017)
***PRESS RELEASE*** FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Big Bat Find in Alberta’s Boreal Forest • Alberta’s largest-known hibernation site outside of Rocky Mountains discovered • Hundreds of endangered bats roosting in cave • Site information vital as disease devastating bats moves westHigher resolution images of the photos below are available at:https://www.wcscanada.org/Portals/96/images/Alberta Hibernaculum Discovery Photos.zipPlease ensure pho...
READ THE STORY
Posted in:
Press Release
Comments on Ontario's Climate Change Action Plan
Views: 3646
(March 16, 2017)
In June 2016, Ontario’s Minister of the Environment and Climate Change released Ontario's Climate Change Action Plan. This five-year plan outlines how the Government and its partners will fight climate change and is focused actions to reduce greenhouse gases (mitigation) and help move Ontario towards a low-carbon economy.One of the actions in the Plan focuses on the role of land to reduce emissions. For example, trees and plants absorb carbon dioxide, a key greenhouse gas, and st...
READ THE STORY
Posted in:
News Item
Premier Announces Ban of Off-Highway Vehicles from Castle Wildlands, Alberta
Views: 2855
(February 13, 2017)
Alberta Premier Rachel Notley has announced the final boundaries and new protection measures for the Castle Wildlands and Provincial Park in southwest Alberta. The Wildlands Park will encompass nearly 80,000 hectares, while the adjacent Provincial Park will cover 25,500 hectares. These areas border Waterton Lakes National Park to the south. In the management plan, Premier Notley made the crucial decision to prohibit Off-Highway Vehicles (OHV) in much of the area later this spring ...
READ THE STORY
Posted in:
News Item
B.C. Has Only a Small Window to Help Bats
Views: 3096
(January 25, 2017)
The recent discovery in northwest Washington State of bats infected with white-nose syndrome (WNS), a fungal disease that has devastated bat populations in eastern North America, is a wake-up call. When WNS finds its way to BC, it is likely to bring with it major economic impacts both agricultural and forestry. Bats are voracious consumers of insects and if their numbers decline like they have in the east, there is big trouble ahead.Bats play vital roles in pest control. At least one species of ...
READ THE STORY
Posted in:
News Item
WCS Applauds New International Agreement to Protect Polar Regions
Views: 2006
(January 19, 2017)
New “Polar Code” will help minimize effects of development on wildlife in changing Arctic and Antarctic watersNew standards will help safeguard wildlife, and for the Arctic, the local communities that rely on them for food securityNew York (January 19, 2017) – WCS (Wildlife Conservation Society) commends the International Maritime Organization and partners for the development and implementation of the “Polar Code,” a binding international agreeme...
READ THE STORY
Posted in:
Press Release
Millions of dollars in pest control services for agriculture and forestry at risk due to spread of bat killing disease
Views: 1148
(January 10, 2017)
B.C. has only a small window to act to help batsCONTACT: Cori Lausen. 250 353 8204The discovery in northwest Washington State of bats killed by white-nose syndrome (WNS), a fungal disease that has devastated bat populations in eastern North America, is a wake-up call for the B.C. government, says the province’s leading bat researcher.“WNS is now on our doorstep and if we don’t act, we could see a huge economic impact for both agricultural and forestry. Bats are voracious ...
READ THE STORY
WCS Canada Scientists Suggest Environmental Assessment Changes to Address Concerns About Process and Outcomes
Views: 3012
(January 10, 2017)
In June, the Government of Canada announced the launch of a comprehensive review of federal environmental assessment processes associated with the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act, 2012 (CEAA 2012). With our extensive experience working in regions of northern Canada where natural resource development is being planned in remote and ecologically intact areas, we at WCS Canada see significant gaps inherent in environmental assessment law, policy, and practice when it comes to address...
READ THE STORY
Posted in:
News Item
Caribou Story Map: Interactive Web Tool Shows Mining Claim Footprints and Caribou Ranges in Ontario’s Far North
Views: 3656
(December 29, 2016)
Great potential mineral wealth, including world-class mineral deposits of chromite in the Ring of Fire, has resulted in Ontario’s Far North becoming the fastest growing area of mineral exploration in the province. Resulting threats to caribou in Ontario’s northern regions include cumulative habitat disturbance and loss of access to critical areas for calving or feeding. Although the province is committed (through the Caribou Conservation Plan) to track disturbance within carib...
READ THE STORY
Posted in:
News Item
Page 16 of 23
First
Previous
11
12
13
14
15
[16]
17
18
19
20
Next
Last
Current Articles
|
Archives
|
Search
Photo credits: Banner | William Halliday © WCS Canada