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Earth Is Now Our Only Shareholder

If we have any hope of a thriving planet—much less a business—it is going to take all of us doing what we can with the resources we have. This is what we can do.

Read Yvon’s Letter

Raincoast Conservation Foundation Working on Ways to Share the Wealth

 /  Dec 9, 2010 4 Min Read  /  Activism

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Patagonia catalog subscribers have no doubt thumbed through our 2010 Holiday Favorites catalog by now. Alongside all of the sweet gear are profiles of a few of the many environmental activists who attended our 11th Tools for Grassroots Activists Conference. Today's blog post comes from one of those featured activists, Chris Darimont. Chris is a research scientist for the Raincoast Conservation Foundation, a team of conservationists and scientists empowered by research to protect the lands, waters and wildlife of coastal British Columbia.

On a crisp morning early last May, the momma grizzly and her tiny cub were slip-sliding their way down from their snowy high-elevation den. Filling her momma belly with emerging vegetation was the only thing on momma’s mind. Calories from her last feast – spawning salmon many months ago – were now long gone keeping her and her precious daughter alive. Meanwhile, my team and I, just 1000 feet below, were inching our way up slope…trying to learn about and protect grizzlies.

[Sharing the wealth; momma bear gives precious life to her cub. Photo: Larry Travis/www.raincoast.org]

We were in the heart of coastal British Columbia’s ‘Great Bear Rainforest’, an area that still safeguards one of the planet’s last grizzly bear-salmon strongholds. To keep it this way, Raincoast Conservation has assembled a passionate team to tackle one of the area’s most urgent conservation problems with applied science, ethics and something we term ‘informed advocacy’. We’re searching for solutions to how to share the wealth.

Sharing the wealth means allowing grizzlies enough salmon to ensure their survival and well-being. Why is this a challenge? Against a backdrop of failing salmon populations and manifold threats (damaged spawning habitat, mysteries in the open ocean, salmon farms and their disease, and more), commercial fisheries still take the lion’s share of salmon bound for spawning areas and the mouths of bears (and the whole salmon-dependent food web).

Didn’t we learn to share better than this in pre-school? Humans take the biggest slice of the salmon pie, short-changing its many other beneficiaries.

What do we do? At Raincoast, we lobby for bears and this coastal food web, using the best available information: our own. Bear hair we capture from non-invasive hair-snagging stations – like the one we set out to install that morning – provides DNA. This allows us to track bear numbers and sound early warning bells of declines. Chemical analyses on the same hairs estimate how much salmon each bear has consumed and give insight into stress levels, reproductive activity and, potentially, starvation.

While the bears visit our stations, they leave more than hair and data. They also leave images of their antics, captured by our remote cameras and shared with the world.

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Rare glimpses into the private lives of grizzles of the Raincoast. All photos: Raincoast Conservation Foundation

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With urgency we are sharing our findings with fisheries managers and the public. We are on the news, in the board rooms, at policy meetings. With tenacity we remind managers of their obligations to the natural world. We are armed with science, legal tools, and an abundance of energy and passion. The world is starting to notice and demand the same. Its time to share the wealth.

As we ended our climb that morning, we had a bite to eat before installing a hair-snagging station. It was an ideal place: plenty of bear food, and situated in good travel terrain. We could envision a bear or two lumbering down to meet us.

Our vision was bang on. A few hundred feet above us, momma was putting on the brakes and raising her nose for a sniff. The cub, blissfully unaware, skidded into her rear end, almost knocking her down the steep grade upon us. Fortunately, her powerful shoulders and robust claws prevented what would have surely been the mishap of the season. Instead, they sat – and oddly – watched over us going about our work.

So we did not further disrupt their day. We worked at a frantic pace, doing the very best work we could. Doing so reminded me that all of our work had to be rapid and good, as well as compelling to managers and the public. If so, we could be blessed to have these great bears around and living a good life into an increasingly uncertain future.

–Chris Darimont

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Read more about Raincoast's proposals to share the wealth in their NorthernView.com op-ed "Including Wildlife in Fisheries Management Just Makes Sense".

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