The 'Great Bear Rainforest' is the name given by environmental groups in the 1990s to a region of
temperate rain forest, specifically
Pacific temperate rain forest located on the
Central Coast of
British Columbia,
Canada. The forest is 64,000 sq km (25,000 sq mile) in size, twice the size of
Belgium. It spans the Pacific Coast from Vancouver Island north to Alaska.
[1] It features 1,000 year old cedar trees and 90 metre tall Sitka spruce trees.
[2]
Coastal rainforests are characterized by having proximity to both ocean and mountains. The offshore ocean flow into the mountain ranges causes abundant precipitation to fall on the land in between the mountains and the ocean.
The Great Bear rainforest is one of the largest remaining tracts of unspoiled temperate rainforest left in the world. A
February 2006 agreement between the provincial government and a wide coalition of
conservationists,
loggers,
hunters, and
First Nations established a series of conservancies stretching 400 kilometres (250 miles) along the coast. The protected areas will contain 18,000 km² (4.4 million acres), twice the size of
Yellowstone, and another 46,900 km² (11.6 million acres) that is to be run under a management plan that is expected to ensure
sustainable forest management.
The area is home to hundreds of species, including
cougars,
wolves,
salmon,
grizzly bears, and the
Kermode ("spirit") bear, a unique subspecies of the
black bear, in which one in ten cubs display a recessive white colored coat .
The Canadian Government announced on
21 January 2007 that it will spend CAN$30m (US$26m, £13m) to protect this rainforest.
[3] This matches a pledge made previously by the British Columbia provincial government, as well as private donations of $60 million, making the total funding for the new reserve $120 million.
External links
★
Raincoast organization working to preserve B.C.'s Great Bear Rainforest
★
David Suzuki Foundation Report on the Great Bear Rainforest
★
Great Bear Rainforest conservation news from
The Nature Conservancy
★
Government Spirit Bear Website
★
The Rainforests of Home - an atlas of people and place from
Inforain