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Raincoast Conservation Foundation logo with bear and salmon icon.Raincoast Conservation Foundation icon.
  • Fish farms on the BC coast threaten wild salmon.
    Notes from the field | Raincoast updates

    A Day to be Heard

    2006 October 12024 July 8

    A nation’s stand against open-net salmon farming and an appeal to BC’s Special Committee on Sustainable Aquaculture

    Read More A Day to be HeardContinue

  • Notes from the field

    A Living Ocean

    2006 September 12024 July 8

    Hecate Strait is one of the roughest bodies of water on earth, but today we can see the reflections of clouds on its surface. We are nearing the end of a long day, which is nearly the last of our field season, which is, in turn, the last summer of our three-year whale survey. But…

    Read More A Living OceanContinue

  • Notes from the field

    Cutting to the Chase

    2006 August 12024 July 8

    A young wolf races along the shore, his gangly legs negotiating the rocky shoreline as effortlessly as an Olympic gymnast performing a tried routine. Only a fleeting glance over his shoulder betrays his fear as he disappears into the forest. We look at each other in awe as a few moments of calm descend on…

    Read More Cutting to the ChaseContinue

  • Notes from the field

    Open House

    2006 July 292024 July 8

    The Koeye (K’way) watershed is located about 30 miles south of Bella Bella in Fitz Hugh Sound in the heart of the Great Bear Rainforest. Today, there are about three hundred of us gathered on the sandy beach to witness the opening of the Koeye Big House that has been built over the last four…

    Read More Open HouseContinue

  • Notes from the field

    Notes From the Shipyard

    2006 July 262024 July 8

    Raincoast’s dedicated research boat, a 66-foot steel hulled sloop called Achiever, is very close to being operational for 2006. We will launch her from the Shelter Island Shipyard on the Fraser River on July 15 at 10am, and as that day approaches we are ticking off the remaining tasks like items on a grocery list….

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  • Scientific literature

    Facts from faeces: Prey remains in Wolf, Canis lupus, faeces revise occurrence records for mammals of British Columbia’s coastal archipelago.

    2006 July 52024 July 8

    Price, M.H.H., C.T. Darimont, N.N. Winchester, and P.C. Paquet. 2005. Facts from Faeces: Prey Remains in Wolf, Canis lupus, Faeces Revise Occurrence Records for Mammals of British Columbia’s Coastal Archipelago. The Canadian Field Naturalist 119(2): 192-196. Facts from faeces.pdf

    Read More Facts from faeces: Prey remains in Wolf, Canis lupus, faeces revise occurrence records for mammals of British Columbia’s coastal archipelago.Continue

  • Notes from the field

    First Days

    2006 May 12024 July 8

    Chris Williamson, From Bella Bella, BC May 2006 First Days tend to hold a special place in our minds. The feelings, whether they are excitement, nervousness, or anticipation, burn a lasting impression in our brains that can be recalled with a vividness rarely achieved by any day thereafter. Among the First Days etched most deeply…

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  • Notes from the field

    Exploring the Land of C’idawai

    2006 May 12024 July 8

    Briony PennSalt Spring Island, BCMay 2006 In 1916, populations of sandhill crane were pushed to the verge of extinction from overhunting in the United States prompting the introduction of the US Migratory Bird Treaty Act. In Heiltsuk memory, these cranes, called c’idawai, that typically arrived in mid-April from their southern wintering grounds in the lower…

    Read More Exploring the Land of C’idawaiContinue

  • Scientific literature

    Modelling Gray Wolf (Canis lupus) Distribution and Habitat in Coastal Temperate Rainforests of British Columbia, Canada

    2006 April 242024 July 8

    Swan, P.L. 2005. Modelling Gray Wolf (Canis lupus) Distribution and Habitat in Coastal Temperate Rainforests of British Columbia, Canada. MSc. Thesis. University of Calgary. Department of Geography.

    Read More Modelling Gray Wolf (Canis lupus) Distribution and Habitat in Coastal Temperate Rainforests of British Columbia, CanadaContinue

  • A woman in a black jacket standing in a wooded area.
    Notes from the field | Raincoast updates

    The Zen of Isotopes

    2006 April 12024 July 8

    I am master of the world’s smallest spoon. To be spoon master, one’s hand must be steady. My little spoon with its few grains of silt and sand must be placed into what seems like the world’s smallest capsule of foil. Once the sediment is inside, that capsule gets transferred to the balance. If it…

    Read More The Zen of IsotopesContinue

  • Notes from the field

    Great Bear Rainforest wins partial protection

    2006 February 202024 July 8

    Sixteen years ago, a small team of biologists and explorers traveled north from Vancouver Island. The weeks turned into months as they quietly sailed from river valley to river valley documenting for the first time the full extent of the Great Bear Rainforest. It was a life-changing voyage for those on board, sailing through the…

    Read More Great Bear Rainforest wins partial protectionContinue

  • Nicola Temple sits in a boat in her rain gear.
    Notes from the field | Raincoast updates

    Fish out of Water

    2006 February 12024 July 8

    As I crouched down to photograph a pure white banana slug, I was taken aback by how incredible it was to find this small, slow moving, salt-intolerant creature on an outer coastal island.

    Read More Fish out of WaterContinue

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