Friday, November 18, 2022

BC

The 20-year campaign to protect the endangered fish only found one place on earth

Morrison Creek Headwaters, a 22-hectare parcel of protected land in the Comox Valley home to four species of salmon and the endangered Morrison Creek lamprey.Chad Hipolito/The Globe and Mail

The Morrison Creek lamprey might be beautiful only in the eyes of a biologist. But the jawless fish, with its gaping, disc-shaped mouth and eel-like silver body, has become a preoccupation even among those less susceptible to its charms, because it is found in only one place on earth: an unusual, drought-proof stretch of wetlands on Vancouver Island.

This species of lamprey has evolved since the last ice age, surviving even dry spells like the one that has left many of the island’s rivers parched over the past few months. That longevity is a result of a special hydrological feature of its home: the creek is constantly replenished by freshwater springs that bubble out of the ground, a gift from the glacier-fed Comox Lake.

While climate change threatens sensitive ecosystems around the globe, this little pocket of forest and wetlands is well buffered. But most of the land is zoned for heavy industry and owned by a multinational logging company.

“It’s a magical thing, here,” said conservation biologist Tim Ennis, who was running his fingers through one of the small, eternal trickles of water that nurture the wetlands.

Mr. Ennis, the executive director of the Comox Valley Land Trust, has been involved in a 20-year-long community effort to protect the Morrison Creek lamprey, which faces extinction if development is allowed.

The Morrison Creek lamprey, found only in the creek it is named for, has evolved since the last ice age, surviving dry spells thanks to the creek constantly being replenished by freshwater springs that bubble out of the ground, a gift from the glacier-fed Comox Lake.CHAD HIPOLITO/The Globe and Mail

His goal is just weeks away from being realized. The owner of the headwaters of Morrison Creek, Manulife Investment, has offered to sell a 289-hectare parcel to the land trust. The deadline to close the deal is the end of December, and a network of conservationists has raised most of the $4.75-million purchase price.

British Columbia is home to the greatest amount of biodiversity in the country, but the provincial government and Ottawa have been unable to reach an agreement on securing new protected areas. Where there is progress, it is being achieved by First Nations and non-profits, and sometimes both together, while government talks grind on.

Many of those non-profits are land trusts like the one Mr. Ennis runs – organizations whose primary business is buying private land and protecting it from development. The 148 that currently exist in Canada have collectively assembled more than half a million hectares. They often use seed money from government, which is matched by private contributions.

Their work fills a gap left by halting government action. Canada, along with the other Group of Seven countries, has committed to conserving or protecting at least 30 per cent of its lands, inland waters and coastal and marine areas by 2030. As an interim step, Ottawa has set a target of 25 per cent by 2025, but it has a long way to go.

Less than 14 per cent of Canada’s lands and waters are protected, and on average the country is adding 0.8 per cent annually. That pace does not put Canada on track to succeed.

See some of the landscape around Morrison Creek, BC via drone.

The Globe and Mail

Morrison Creek has long been eyed for protection by local conservationists, and the status of its unique lamprey is a rallying point. Formally known as Lampetra richardsoni, the fish has been listed as endangered for two decades. The federal government issued a legal order to protect the lamprey’s critical habitat from destruction in 2019, which established a narrow protected area on either side of the water where it lives.

Still, the lamprey, which is “extremely susceptible to habitat loss” according to the federal protection order, is on the decline. There is constant development pressure in the surrounding urban area of ​​the Comox Valley. A small portion of land near the creek has been protected as parkland, but the land trust’s purchase of the Manulife lands would secure most of the rest of the lamprey’s habitat.

Mr. Ennis was wearing tall waterproof boots to lead a tour through the land he hopes will soon be preserved. The boggy terrain keeps away people for the most part, with their dogs and loud voices, “and so it ends up functioning as like a wildlife refugium,” he explained as he sloshed around the edge of a beaver dam.

Development in the Comox Valley has left few remaining large pockets of nature. “So it’s really important as a way of keeping wildlife in our communities alongside us,” he said.

Conservation biologist Tim Ennis uses GPS to point out the Morrison Creek Headwaters.CHAD HIPOLITO/The Globe and Mail

Morrison Creek is dense with wildlife. Including the lamprey, it is home to 14 species at risk. Red alders lining a well-used wildlife trail are scarred by the claw marks of black bears, and the landscape is shaped by beavers.

A mink peered at a visitor from its shelter in a riverbank before swimming past the carcass of a Coho salmon that had finished spawning. The reliable streamflow has made this a highly productive salmon habitat.

Of all the creatures, Mr. Ennis has a soft spot for the lamprey, which grows to no more than 15 centimeters. “Lamprey is a particularly old lifeform, and seeing how it can evolve into a completely different kind of lamprey in this one place is really a testament to the stability of the hydrology in this ecosystem,” he said. “I think they’re quite beautiful. They are a long very sleek silver fish, and I think quite elegant when you watch them moving in the water.”

The local K’ómoks First Nation call the Morrison Creek headwaters qax mot, meaning “lots of medicine” in their traditional language. Mr. Ennis noted that the conservation effort will ensure the K’ómoks people can access the abundance and diversity of medicinal plants in the area that have been effectively locked up by private land ownership.

The Morrison Creek lamprey, which is ‘extremely susceptible to habitat loss’ according to the federal protection order, is on the decline.Morrison Valley Stream Keepers

The Comox Valley Land Trust has partnered with the BC Parks Foundation to raise the money for the real estate transaction. The foundation’s chief executive, Andrew Day, said the pandemic has increased the public’s appreciation for nature, and that this has helped drive fundraising efforts.

“There’s a tremendous amount of goodwill and gratitude for the natural areas we live in. And a tremendous desire to give back,” he said.

“But also, there’s just a much higher level of global awareness, particularly in BC, about climate and our diversity loss. People want to do tangible things about larger issues, and protecting land in your area where you live is a very concrete thing that people can do.”

Mr. Ennis, also executive director of the Comox Valley Land Trust, has a soft spot for the lamprey. CHAD HIPOLITO/The Globe and Mail

Unique fish found only on Vancouver Island under threat, conservationists say

CTV News Vancouver Island
Updated Nov. 16, 2022

Tucked away on a small parcel of land on Vancouver Island is a creature you will only find in the Comox Valley.

It's called the Morrison Creek Lamprey, and it's a unique form of the Western Brook Lamprey.

Lampreys are a small type of parasitic fish that look like eels.


"Lamprey themselves are ancient in the evolutionary tree. They predate sharks," said Janet Gemmell, president of the Morrison Creek Streamkeepers.


"They’re jawless fishes, so it's even before any fish got jaws. They’re scaleless, they have cartilage, so they’re very primitive," she said.


SEEKING LAND PURCHASE


Volunteers with the Morrison Creek Streamkeepers and with the Comox Valley Land Trust are trying to preserve a forested area around the Morrison Creek headwaters.

"In 2019 we did our first land acquisition in the headwaters, which was about 50 acres," said David Stapley, director of the Comox Valley Land Trust.

"This piece here is 750 acres, or 280 hectares, and basically we're purchasing almost the rest of the headwaters," he said.

The groups have their sights set on land that is currently held by private forest companies so that the area doesn’t become logged or turned into industrial land.

"It’s really important for us to protect this area because of the threats of logging or industrial development, because it’s such a rich site for biodiversity," said Stapley.

"It’s not just the aquatic species here but all your major animals like the cougars and bears and martens," he said.

Through government and private funding, the two groups are trying to raise $4.75 million by Dec. 31. They've already raised millions and are down to the final $375,000 needed to meet their goal.

"About 40 per cent of the area is wetland, and of course these maturing second-growth forests of cedar and fir and alder and cottonwood, they’re all sequestering carbon and storing it in the soil," said Stapley.

"It’s really important that we maintain our natural areas so that nature can help absorb some of the CO2 in the atmosphere," he said.

Volunteers say they're dedicated to preserving the area for creatures that travel through the region both on land and in the water.

"This particular lamprey has adapted to this ecosystem and so if there are changes to this ecosystem then we might lose that amazing creature that’s a very niche creature – that’s like a boutique creature," said Gemmell.

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