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Caribou butts and wolf cameos: How motion-activated cameras may reveal the secrets of a healthy Manitoba herd
News
Organization
Wildlife scientists from two provinces are using motion-activated cameras to try to discern why one caribou population in northern Manitoba appears to be stable while herds are dwindling almost...
Collaborative research and monitoring of migratory Eastern Cape Chruchill caribou
Project
Organization:
The Cape Churchill caribou herd, part of the Eastern Migratory caribou population, resides along the western coast of Hudson Bay and has been largely unstudied. However, they are locally important to...
Paddling Past Polar Bears - Connecting for Conservations Speaker Series
Event
Event Date and Time
January 15th, 2021 at 11:00am MST to January 15th, 2021 at 12:00pm MST
The Seal River Watershed is one of the last great wild spaces on Earth. Find out how five Indigenous communities are working together to conserve the watershed’s 50,000 square kilometres as an...
Webinar - Collaborative Research and Monitoring of Migratory Eastern Cape Churchill Caribou: Linking Wapusk National Park and an Indigenous Conservation Protected Area
Resource
The Cape Churchill caribou herd, part of the Eastern Migratory caribou population, resides along the western coast of Hudson Bay and has been largely unstudied. However, they are locally important to...
Webinar - Collaborative Research and Monitoring of Migratory Eastern Cape Churchill Caribou: Linking Wapusk National Park and an Indigenous Conservation Protected Area
Resource
The Cape Churchill caribou herd, part of the Eastern Migratory caribou population, resides along the western coast of Hudson Bay and has been largely unstudied. However, they are locally important to...