Safeguarding Coastal Carnivores in the Southern Great Bear Rainforest tenure

Photo by Jeremy Koreski / Nimmo Bay.

We have raised the funds to stop commercial trophy hunting in more than a quarter of the Great Bear Rainforest in British Columbia.

We raised $1.92 million! Thank you for your help.

100 %

Southern Great Bear Rainforest tenure

Sitting on the coast of British Columbia, Canada, the Southern Great Bear tenure covers 18,239 km2, more than a quarter of the Great Bear Rainforest. Purchasing this tenure protects dozens of species from being commercially trophy hunted because it gives us the exclusive rights to commercially guide trophy hunters. 

We buy the rights to guide people to shoot wildlife – and our clients choose not to shoot the wildlife.

Safeguarding Coastal Carnivores in the Southern Great Bear Rainforest. [web map].

The Southern tenure contains significant populations of grizzlies, cougars, black bears, wolves, and Roosevelt elk left in BC and contains six major coastal inlets, over 10 major river systems with critical estuaries and countless smaller named and unnamed watersheds that support healthy ecosystems – from Smith Inlet to Toba Inlet. This purchase also exemplifies the new economy as there are more than 19 ecotourism companies who rely on respectful wildlife viewing.

Photo by Michelle Valberg

Permanent end to commercial trophy hunting

Raincoast now controls the commercial hunting rights in six tenures, more than 56,000km2 of the BC coast – an area larger than Vancouver Island or the entire country of Belgium. 

Through the acquisition of these tenures, we own the commercial hunting rights in perpetuity, thus protecting all coastal carnivores that would be, otherwise, subject to trophy hunting.

Photo by Taylor Burke.

Buying hunting territories, a permanent fix

Raincoast began purchasing hunting tenures back in 2005, when it was clear a different solution to the vagaries of political objectives was needed. Despite our campaign success 20 years ago, achieving a province-wide moratorium on grizzly hunting, the trophy hunt ban was overturned by a subsequent government following a provincial election. Purchasing tenures appeared to be the only permanent solution to stopping commercial trophy hunting.  Purchasing hunting tenures demonstrated our support for the  First Nations control of their resources in the Great Bear Rainforest. 

In 2017, after 20 years of public campaigning, the province ended the grizzly trophy hunt. While welcomed and long fought, this did not negate the need for protection for the other approximately 60 species that trophy hunters are allowed to exploit. Acquiring hunting territories is a permanent solution, not just for grizzlies, but for all carnivores hunted for trophies.

Working with First Nations

Your support will help Raincoast and our First Nations partners end commercial trophy hunting in their territories. Purchasing these tenures is one small part in the process of supporting First Nations stewardship in the Great Bear Rainforest.

Our ultimate goal is to secure the rights to all commercial trophy hunting tenures in the Great Bear Rainforest. We now stand poised to complete the job.

Elk in the woods
Photo by Kristian Gillies.

You can help us stop
commercial trophy hunting

Photo by Finn Steiner.

Recent articles

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A critical assessment of the BC Central Coast Land & Resource Management Plan

This report is a critical assessment of protection for key wildlife & salmon habitats under the proposed BC Central Coast Land & Resource Management Plan undertaken by Dr. Paul Paquet, Dr. Chris Darimont, Dr. John Nelson and Katrina Bennett. The analysis focuses on salmon habitat, wolf homesites and deer winter range. The findings indicate that…
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Scientific Criteria for Evaluation and Establishment of Grizzly Bear Management Areas (2004)

Grizzly Bear Management Areas (GBMAs) have been a focal part of the British Columbia (BC) government’s Grizzly Bear Conservation Strategy since 1995, and the BC government’s Independent Scientific Panel again recommended in 2003 that they be implemented with provisions to maintain connectivity between populations. In order to develop a conservation biology based model for a…
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Scientific Criteria for Evaluation and Establishment of GBMAs: Exec Summary

Executive summary and recommendations only. View the report in .PDF
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Connectivity where the land meets the sea

Paquet, P.C., C.T. Darimont, F. M. Moola, and C. Genovali. 2005. Connectivity where the land meets the sea – preserving the last of the best. Wild Earth 14: 21-25 (Peer edited). View the paper in .PDF
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Range expansion by moose into coastal temperate rainforests of British Columbia, Canada

Darimont, C.T., P.C. Paquet, T.E. Reimchen, and V. Crichton. 2005. Range expansion by moose into coastal temperate rainforests of British Columbia, Canada. Diversity and Distributions 11: 235-239. View the paper in .PDF
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Predators in natural fragments: foraging ecology of wolves in British Columbia’s central and North Coast archipelago

Darimont, C.T., M.H.H. Price, N.N. Winchester, J. Gordon-Walker, and P.C. Paquet. 2004. Predators in natural fragments: foraging ecology of wolves of British Columbia’s central and north coast archipelago. Journal of Biogeography 31: 1867-1877. View the paper in .PDF