Half of Canada's monitored wildlife is in decline, major study finds
New report paints a bleak picture for wildlife in a country that is home to a quarter of the Earths wetlands, 8,500 rivers and more than 2m lakes
Ashifa Kassam in Toronto
@ashifa_k
Friday 15 September 2017 06.00 EDT
A new analysis looking at the long-term trends of more than 900 species of wildlife in Canada has found that half of them have seen their populations decline, including several species already listed as threatened or endangered.
The Living Planet Report Canada, released on Thursday by World Wildlife Fund Canada, paints a bleak picture for wildlife in a country that is home to a quarter of the earths wetlands, 8,500 rivers and more than 2m freshwater lakes.
During the past four decades, human activity whether industrial development, farming, forestry or the expansion of urban areas as well as climate change, pollution and overfishing have helped shrink the populations of 451 species, representing half of the 903 monitored species in the country.
I think for many Canadians, its somewhat of a surprise, said James Snider of WWF Canada and the lead author of the report. Canada is this vast nation with huge wilderness areas, at times we assume that wildlife here is doing OK.
More:
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/sep/15/canada-wildlife-study-decline-living-planet-report