BC Nature eNews April 2015

Upcoming Events
  • Chilcotin Camp – August 20-23 2015. A few spots still available Please email Office
  • AGM 2015 – Salt Spring Island – May 7 – 10, 2015. Accomodation – if you have not made your reservation for accommodation, please call Nieke Visser – 250-537-5443 for assistance in contacting lodging. Registration Salt Spring Island Trail and Nature Club
  • Rene Savenye Scholarship applications should be in prior to May 30, 2015 – see website for application.
  • Skagit Bird Blitz – May 22-24/15 Mt. Robson Bird Blitz – June 5-7/15 Manning Park Bird Blitz – June 19-21/15 – See www.bcnature.ca for more information
  • Talayoko and Tofino Camps – Sold out with waiting list.
  • Mt. Robson Bird Blitz – June 5 – 7, 2015 Contact: organizer
  • Harrison Hot Springs -Eagles & Salmon Camp – Nov. 26-Nov 29, 2015. Information to be posted on website when finalized.Preliminary information available at Field Camps Link
Earth Day 2015
April 22, 2015 is Earth Day. Do you or your club have an event planned and if not, need assistance? Here is the Earth Day . Website There are some great ideas to get involved and a place to register your event.
Issue 41
Date April 2015
Marsh Wren – Victoria 2014
Spring Magazine Available on line
For those that don’t receive wish to receive their magazine via Canada Post, the Spring Magazine is available on line. An email notifying you when the latest issue is uploaded. Current magazines are behind members only access. If you require your access and password, please email the Office
Conservation Items in the News
Ecojustice congratulates Ontario on being first in North America to restrict bee-killing pesticides – See more at: Link

National Energy Board dishes Enbridge $264K in penalties Metro News, Canadian Press. The National Energy Board has slapped pipeline builder Enbridge Inc.with $264,000 in penalties this month. Two penalties — each worth $100,000 — relate to work on its Line 3 pipeline in Manitoba that the board says caused environmental and safety hazards. Last summer, the board ordered Enbridge to stop work on the Alberta-to-Wisconsin line for about a month after an inspection found numerous problems. Separately, a $64,000 penalty was levied related to design changes to a storage tank in Regina that had not been approved. Board spokesman Darin Barter says the “administrative monetary penalties” are a relatively new measure for the NEB and the amounts Enbridge has racked up are the highest so far. Enbridge spokesman Graham White says the company is reviewing the penalties to determine its next steps.

Canadian Natural Resources Fined $125,000 For 2010 Oil Spill Huffington Post Canada, Canadian Press. Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. is facing $125,000 in penalties nearly five years after an oil spill in northwestern Alberta. The sentence was handed down in provincial court last Friday after the company pleaded guilty to an offence under the Fisheries Act. In a release, Environment Canada says $113,000 will go toward its Environmental Damages Fund and the remaining $12,000 will be paid as a fine. Canadian Natural has also been added to the Environmental Offenders Registry. In May 2010, about 6,000 litres of crude spilled from an emergency overflow tank at a Canadian Natural site near the town of Spirit River. Of that, 750 litres entered Sneddon Creek, a tributary to the Peace River. Environment Canada says its investigation concluded the spill was caused by valves that were left open and that the Calgary-based company failed to ensure operational procedures were foll! owed.
B.C. Cetacean Sightings Network update for 2015
Our new WhaleReport App is almost ready!
It’s the most wonderful time of the year and we are celebrating for two reasons: the beginning of boating season is on the horizon and our iPhone app has been completed! This means you will very soon be able to report your sightings via our WhaleReport app, which will be available for free download from the Vancouver Aquarium’s App store on iTunes. Stay tuned for the app’s release announcement, coming very soon! To read more, please go to this Link
Interesting Sites and Articles
Anne Murrays – Snakes and Spawn – Article

Arctic Circle Cam – Link

Animal Homes – PBS Special – Link for more information

A series of Webcams in Montana – this one is for Long Eared Owl – Long Eared Owl This webcam is for Great Horned Owl

Vanderhoof Migratory Bird video

Water is life; we can’t afford to waste it – Link

Birds that bring gifts and do the gardening Link >br>
Heron Cam – Stanley Park Link Here
About Town
Vancouver Bird Week May 2-9, 2015
Vancouver Public Library Programs
May 2 2015 (7:00 PM – 8:30 PM)
Central Branch
Dinosaurs in my Garden? The World of Birds and Birding with Dr. Peter Candido
Numbering over 10,000 species, birds are the most diverse group of vertebrates on earth. Explore some of the amazing abilities of birds and learn about some of the species found in the Vancouver area and beyond with Dr. Peter Candido.
May 8 2015 (7:00 PM – 8:30 PM)
Central Branch
Ruff Sex: Fighters, Wingmen, and Female Mimics with Dr. David Lank Ruff sandpipers have three types of males that differ distinctly in breeding plumage, courtship behaviour, and genes. Learn how and why dark plumaged territorial males, light plumaged co-displaying associates, and rare ‘female mimics’ co-exist and which ones females prefer with Dr. David Lank.
May 9 2015 (7:00 PM – 8:30 PM)
Central Branch
Owls and Ducks in Cities, OH MY! A Bird Week double header on urban birds. First, owls were a common feature of farmland one or two generations ago, but have become increasingly difficult to find. How have owls been able to adapt to urbanization in the last 30 years and what challenges do they face, with Sofi Hindmarch. Then we look at waterfowl grazing adaptations and how land use planning can shift behaviour to better co-exist with these important species, with Holly Middleton.

Earth Day 2015 – check with your local community or Naturalists club for any planned activities in your area for Earth Day.

Western Sandpiper Migration
Roberts Bank is a critical stop on the Pacific Flyway. There are few such stopping places for the Western Sandpipers on their long journey north from Central and South America, where they have spent the winter, all the way north to Western Alaska.

Yet this is where Port Metro Vancouver plans to build a second container terminal, on a huge man-made island right on Roberts Bank. If this port development were to go ahead it will likely damage this critical ecosystem and in particular the unique biofilm on Roberts Bank. Not only that but they plan to expand the port causeway destroying part of the biofilm altogether. It is this biofilm that Western Sandpipers rely on as a critical food source during their stopover as they migrate north to their breeding grounds.

This annual migration is a huge natural spectacle and not to be missed. This major annual migration event at Roberts Bank is one of the most important in the whole of Canada. At its peak there are tens of thousands of birds in huge flocks in the air, swooping in to feed and slurping on the biofilm as they build up their strength before continuing on their journey. This has to be witnessed to understand its importance. This area has to be saved from any further industrial or port development – the entire species depends on it.

We (Against Port Expansion Community Group) have chosen April 25 for this year’s “Peep-In”.
The migration will be underway and the morning high tide will have peaked at 10:25 and will then be on the ebb (falling tide), which is when the sandpipers feed.
We want to demonstrate to Port Metro Vancouver that we will not allow them to destroy this valuable habitat.
We need as many people as possible to come out and show their support to protect Roberts Bank against any further industrial development.
Directions: 1. From Highway 99 southbound take the second exit after the Massey Tunnel onto Highway 17a.
2. Drive on Highway 17a towards Ladner and the first traffic light.
3. At this traffic light turn right onto Ladner Trunk Road (Highway 10).
4. Drive through Ladner town centre.
5. At Arthur Drive go across the traffic light onto 47a Avenue, which then runs into River Road West.
6. Continue west along River Road West all the way to the end, where there is plenty of parking.
7. Lock your vehicle and DO NOT leave any valuables in it.
8. Walk west along the dyke – for about 10 minutes to Brunswick Point. Link
Make sure to bring your cameras, binoculars and/or telescopes. We hope to have naturalists on site to explain what is happening. Rubber boots are essential. The best views of the sandpipers are from the marsh immediately below the dyke. However make sure not to stray out onto the mud. There are lots of soft areas and we do not want anybody to get stuck.
Tell your friends. Invite groups that you belong to. We look forward to see you on April 25.
Festivals to attend around our province
April 17 to 19, 2015 – Mayne Island, BC
Active Pass Nature and Arts Festival 2015 – for more information please visit this link

May 1 -2 – Tofino Shorebird Festival – for more information – Link Here

May 8,9, & 10 – The Creston Valley is celebrating the third annual Creston Valley Bird Fest. With over 300 recorded migrating and resident bird species in the valley, Important Bird Area and International Ramsar status, and over 7000 hectares of protected wetland, this is where the birds are. For a list of festival events, please visit this Link

Meadowlark Nature Festival – May 14 to 18, 2015. For more information – please view this link
SongbirdSOS
SongbirdSOS is the artfully-shot story of the mass depletion of songbirds in the Americas, an alarming thinning of populations that has seen declines of many species since the 1960s. Watch the episode Link Here
Nature Trust Campaign to fund South Okanagan Antelope Brush Conservation Area
The Nature Trust of BC is working to acquire 34.6 hectares (85 acres) to create the largest private holding of rare Antelope-brush habitat in the South Okanagan. Fifteen years in the making, this fourth and final phase of the Antelope-brush Conservation Area project is underway.
Located at the south end of Vaseux Lake, between Okanagan Falls and Oliver, this acquisition along with The Nature Trust’s adjoining property is home to more than 20 species at risk. Most notably, this land supports more than half of the Canadian population of the Behr’s Hairstreak butterfly. Bighorn Sheep, Pallid Bat, Desert Night Snake, Great Basin Spadefoot and Lewis’s Woodpecker are among other species at risk that are known to occur on these lands.
If you would like more information about The Nature Trust of BC or our Antelope-brush campaign, please feel free to ask us any questions or visit naturetrust.bc.ca. More about the Antelope-brush campaign, specifically, can be found on this pdf we put together that SOSCP kindly posted on their website for us: link
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