Caribou moved 1,300 km to boost southern B.C. herd - Action News
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British Columbia

Caribou moved 1,300 km to boost southern B.C. herd

A transfer of 20 mountain caribou from northern to southern B.C. went reasonably well, officials say, despite weather complications and the death of one of the animals en route.

Bad weather complicates caribou transfer, divides herd

A caribou exits a truck into the temporary holding pen prior to its release into the Purcell Mountains (Government of British Columbia)

A transfer of 20 mountain caribou from northern to southern B.C. went reasonably well, officials say, despite weather complications and the death of one of the animals en route.

Over the weekend, government biologists and veterinariansattempted to transfer 20 cariboufrom a healthy donor herd in the Dease Lake area, about 250 kilometres south of the B.C.-Yukon border, to the endangered southern Purcell herd in the East Kootenay.

The animals travelled by truck from Dease Lake to Kimberley, then were transferredbyhelicopter to two sites in the southern Purcells, a 1,300 kilometre journey.

One of the caribou died during the transfer probably from stress, said government biologists and weather prevented the team from dropping the 19 remaining animals all in the same area.

Ten of the caribou were put near the existing herd, but the other nine had to be dropped in a different valley. Officials hope the three herds will eventually reunite.

Transplant a boost forcaribou herd

Still, the transfer was a success, said John Bergenske of Wildsight, an environmental group that helped with the transfer.

"It was a day that so many of us have been waiting for, literally, for years in terms of trying to bring caribou herds in the Kootenays back into what they once were," said Bergenske.

"Our hopes are they will thrive and adapt to habitat and help recover mountain caribou in southern British Columbia."

The southern Purcell herd near Kimberley has dwindled to just 15 animals, and officials hope the transplanted caribou will boost the struggling herd.

All the animals have been radio collared and biologists will studytheir movement patterns.Wolves and cougars in the area have also been radio collared, and if theystart to attack the transplanted herd,the predators may be destroyed.

If the northern caribou adapt well to their new surroundings,another 20 will be relocated next year,at a cost of $10,000 each.

Officialssay they hope the population will naturally grow to 100 animals by 2027.

With files from the CBC's Bob Keating