Wildlife returning to the city

PHOTO: ARLEN REDEKOP / VANCOUVER SUN A new beaver pond was built at Hinge Park in Vancouver.

PHOTO: ARLEN REDEKOP / VANCOUVER SUN
A new beaver pond was built at Hinge Park in Vancouver.

Story adapted from The Vancouver Sun by Patty Bossort

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Black-tailed deer left Vancouver 30 years ago. Elk disappeared from the False Creek area a century ago. The last cougar in Vancouver was shot in Stanley Park in 1911.

People in Vancouver did not want large wild animals to live in town.

Parts of Vancouver are close to natural areas

Parts of Vancouver still have some large wildlife. They are close to natural areas.

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North Vancouver

North Vancouver is built on the mountainside, next to the forest. Black bears still come into North Vancouver.

PHOTO - PIXABAY.COM a black bear

PHOTO – PIXABAY.COM
a black bear

Burnaby Mountain

Bobcats live on Burnaby Mountain.

PHOTO - PIXABAY.COM a bobcat

PHOTO – PIXABAY.COM
a bobcat

Coquitlam

Deer are sometimes seen in Coquitlam.

PHOTO - PIXABAY.COM a deer near a street

PHOTO – PIXABAY.COM
a deer near a street

Some wild animals are coming back to the city.

The Vancouver park board is restoring natural areas in the city. They will do this for four years. They will restore 25 hectares of natural areas in four years. They are encouraging wildlife to come back to the city.

PHOTO: NICK PROCAYLO / VANCOUVER The beaver are protected in this pond at Hinge Park in False Creek.

PHOTO: NICK PROCAYLO / VANCOUVER
The beaver are protected in this pond at Hinge Park in False Creek.

Coyotes, raccoons and skunks are seen in most neighborhoods. Beavers are moving back into several city parks and waterways.

A city can be a healthy environment

Vancouver is a healthy place for some wild animals. They can live with humans.

River otters live in the ponds at Vanier Park.

PHOTO - PIXABAY.COM a river otter

PHOTO – PIXABAY.COM
a river otter

Hinge Park is a new park. It is near the Olympic Village. The park has a creek and a man-made island. Beaver, coyotes, river otters, raccoons and waterfowl moved in there.

In 2015 a grey whale swam into English Bay. It was the first grey whale in English Bay since 2010.

A pod of orcas swam into Burrard Inlet in 2015.

The herring started coming back to False Creek in 2009.

More bald eagles have returned. In 2004, there were five nests. In 2014 there were 15.

PHOTO - PIXABAY.COM a bald eagle

PHOTO – PIXABAY.COM
a bald eagle

There are problems to solve

Beaver chew on trees, build dams and cause flooding. The city wraps trees with wire mesh to stop them chewing. They tear down the beaver dams in Stanley Park.

Coyotes eat rats, squirrels, cats and small dogs.

Canada geese leave droppings in parks and playing fields. They breed in large numbers.

Black bears raid garbage cans.

The challenge

Nick Page is a biologist for the Vancouver Park Board. He says we like to see nature in the city. We like to see whales in English Bay and beaver in Olympic Village.

PHOTO: NICK PROCAYLO / VANCOUVER Vancouver Park Board biologist Nick Page at the new beaver pond at Hinge Park

PHOTO: NICK PROCAYLO / VANCOUVER
Vancouver Park Board biologist Nick Page at the new beaver pond at Hinge Park

About the Canada geese Nick Page says, “We still are challenged… Do we just go on adapting and tolerating them, or do we start to manage their populations?”

More urban wildlife

PHOTO - PIXABAY.COM a coyote

PHOTO – PIXABAY.COM
a coyote

PHOTO - PIXABAY.COM a raccoon

PHOTO – PIXABAY.COM
a raccoon

PHOTO - PIXABAY.COM skunks

PHOTO – PIXABAY.COM
skunks

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