Caribou habitat restoration may be ineffective in the short term, says UBC study
VANCOUVER — A new study done in northeastern Alberta suggests habitat restoration may not be enough to save threatened woodland caribou, at least in the short term, and researchers at the University of British Columbia say their results make the case for a more rigorous analysis of conservation methods.
Much of the caribou habitat in Western Canada has already been degraded by industrial activities, such as oil and gas exploration, so one of the key tools being used to protect caribou is habitat restoration, said Cole Burton, the senior author of the study and a forestry professor who leads the wildlife coexistence lab at the university.
But wildlife responses to habitat restoration are often assumed rather than verified, the study says.
“We can’t just accept on faith that things are working,” Burton said in an interview on Wednesday.