|
Canada is home to one of the rarest and most endangered types of ancient forest in the world - coastal temperate rainforests. They only exist in their natural state in temperate zones, stretching along the west coast of Canada and much of the US. These forests only ever covered 0.2 percent of the earth's land surface, and are far rarer than tropical rainforests.
On Wednesday, April 4, 2001, the government of British Columbia announced support for new approaches to conservation and forest management in BC's Great Bear Rainforest. This is a significant first step in ensuring the future protection of Canada's Great Bear Rainforest on British Columbia's central and north coasts. This region of one-thousand year old cedar trees, towering ancient spruce, grizzly, black and rare white "Spirit" bears, wild salmon, eagles, wolves and enormous biological diversity is globally rare and truly an international treasure worthy of protection. These first steps by the forest industry and politicians toward ensuring a healthy future for the rainforest follow an intensive global campaign by Greenpeace to build a consensus of opposition among international buyers of forest products to the irresponsible destruction of BC's last intact rainforests.
The agreement includes:
These decisions do not completely ensure the future health of the Great Bear Rainforest, but are the first concrete steps in the right direction. Ecosystem-based management recognizes the need for large, contiguous tracts of wilderness and the need for ecologically responsible logging practices. |
|
|||
|
Greenpeace
launches Canada's
Great Bear virtual rainforest tour. - Needs Flash and Quicktime
plugin Help
spread the good news
|
||||