Published scientific literature
Raincoast is a team of scientists and conservationists that undertake primary research and publishes peer-reviewed science to inform our conservation objectives. As an evidence-based, conservation science organisation (science ENGO), that operates a research lab, research field station and a research/sailing vessel, we are unique in Canada.


Investigate. Inform. Inspire.
Raincoast’s in-house scientists, collaborating graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and professors make us unique among conservation groups. We work with First Nations, academic institutions, government and other NGOs to gather information and build support for decisions that protect marine and terrestrial ecosystems, their components and processes. We conduct applied, process-oriented, and hypothesis-driven research that has immediate and relevant utility for the conservation debate and the collective body of scientific knowledge.
Peer-reviewed science publications
Research: Trophy hunters pay more to target larger-bodied carnivores
Habitat use by juvenile salmon, other migratory fish, and resident fish species underscores the importance of estuarine habitat mosaics
Research: Publication reform to safeguard wildlife from researcher harm
Research: Differentiating between regulation and hunting as conservation interventions
Salmon species diversity predicts salmon consumption by terrestrial wildlife
Pacific herring spawn events influence nearshore subtidal and intertidal species
Conservation Letters: The elephant (head) in the room: A critical look at trophy hunting
Predictions from machine learning ensembles: marine bird distribution and density on Canada’s Pacific coast
Criteria for a good catch: A conceptual framework to guide sourcing of sustainable salmon fisheries
Mismeasured mortality: correcting estimates of wolf poaching in the United States
Applied Ecology: Hallmarks of science missing from North American wildlife management
Political populations of large carnivores













