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BC's Wilderness Protection Program
BC Spaces for Nature Wilderness Protection Program focuses on preserving BC's Great Wild Spaces.
Often achieved by linking together a complex of protected areas, Great Wild Spaces are vast natural areas which have global conservation significance and which are large enough to ensure that entire ecosystems, and especially large predator-prey wildlife populations, will survive over time.
Great Wild Spaces have the potential to serve over the long term as earth's premier sanctuaries for biodiversity, wildlife, and wilderness. Great Wild Spaces are world
preserves for Nature, and include such sites as Africa's Serengeti and the U.S.
National Parks of the Colorado Plateau.
Great Wild Spaces at Risk
The calibre of wilderness remaining in British Columbia still offers the chance to bequest a number of globally significant Great Wild Spaces to future generations.
Great Wild Spaces in our province of particular interest to BC Spaces for Nature include:
Wilderness: British Columbia's legacy
British Columbia offers one of the premier opportunities remaining on the
continent to preserve wilderness, old growth forests, wildlife and biodiversity.
With the largest range of ecologic variety of any jurisdiction in North America,
BC incorporates almost all the landscapes found in Alaska, Alberta, Washington,
Oregon, Idaho and Montana. In fact, this one province encompasses 14 biogeoclimatic
zones-or ecosystems-ranging from coastal beaches to 15,000 foot high glacial
peaks; and from Canada's only desert (in the south Okanagan) to temperate
rainforests.
The Threat: The Irreversible Loss of Nature
Parks are biological lifeboats. And since wilderness landscapes are the places
in the world where the genetic record of Nature remains the most complete,
they serve as modern day Arks. This being so, completing the BC parks system
is of the highest environmental priority.
Unfortunately, over the decades BC's natural environment has been extensively
impacted by forestry, mining, commercial fishing, power development, and roading.
Today World Wildlife Fund-Canada research indicates that 60% of BC's land
base-80% in the southern half of the province-is either already developed
or committed to resource and industrial use. For example:
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By 1990, two thirds of Vancouver Island's ancient forests
had been cut, with half of this logging taking place since 1954.
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In the vast Cariboo-Chilcotin Forest Region of interior
BC (which encompasses about 15% of the provincial land area), half of all
the regions' trees were cut in just eight years: from 1988 to 1996.
To explore BC's Parks and Protected Areas and to learn about their natural splendor, recreation opportunities & conservation history, we invite you to visit the Great Wild Spaces website.
You can help! You can help support the campaigns to protect these BC Great Wild Spaces by sending your tax creditable donation to BC Spaces for Nature.
Please make your cheque payable to
BC Spaces for Nature, Box
673, Gibsons BC, V0N 1V0 Charitable Registration #13167 0234 RR0001
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