A Nelson biologist says the Granite Pointe Golf Club has ignored her advice on how to protect two heron nests in an area the club has logged southwest of its golf course.
香蕉视频直播淭hey香蕉视频直播檝e ignored all of the written documentation and verbal direction that they received on phone calls and interactions with ministry biologists from Cranbrook and Nelson, and they ignored my advice,香蕉视频直播 says Marlene Machmer. 香蕉视频直播淭hey香蕉视频直播檝e ignored my attempts to volunteer to help them back in April to develop a prescription for this heron nest area for free.香蕉视频直播
She says the club failed to leave a buffer zone, according to provincial guidelines for this species required by provincial legislation, around the trees when the area was logged this fall.
Machmer is attuned to blue herons and their habitat because since 2002 she has monitored all heron nests in the Columbia Basin for the and the Columbia Basin Trust.
In April, when she learned that the club would be logging the land, she informed the club and contacted Ministry of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development (FLNROR) biologists in Nelson and Cranbrook.
The purpose of the golf club香蕉视频直播檚 logging is to create new fairways to replace existing ones that will become the site of a planned on Granite Pointe land.
Am Naqvi, president of Granite Pointe Golf Club, declined to comment when contacted by the Nelson Star.
In B.C., the interior subspecies of the great blue heron is a , because of declining populations and sensitivity to human activities.
In April, Granite Pointe香蕉视频直播檚 board of directors received an email from FLNROR biologist Irene Manly, who explained there were three active blue heron nests in two trees on property the club was planning to log.
香蕉视频直播淗erons are nesting at this time and extremely sensitive to disturbance,香蕉视频直播 Manly wrote, citing section 34 of B.C.香蕉视频直播檚 Wildlife Act. 香蕉视频直播淭he nests and nest trees of herons are protected year-round, whether or not the nest is currently active.香蕉视频直播
Manly went on to ask that the club mark out a buffer zone of 200 metres around the two nest trees and not log within it.
In her email, Manly included links to a on development around blue heron nests, and to a document of environmental for at-risk species.
Photo 1
The nest trees on the edge of Granite Pointe land are two large white pines standing very close to each other in a forest southwest of the current golf course. The nests are, according to Machmer香蕉视频直播檚 estimate, almost 50 metres above the forest floor 香蕉视频直播 so high that they are difficult to see clearly from the ground.
In an April email to Granite Pointe, Machmer wrote, 香蕉视频直播淪imply leaving a small buffer (e.g., 25 m as you suggested) is not adequate for herons. They require much larger mature-to-old forested buffers around their nest sites to avoid disturbance and nest abandonment and reproductive failure.香蕉视频直播
Herons are susceptible to development near their nests, she says, and will typically abandon them if disturbed. She says she and a local forester offered to help Granite Pointe develop a logging plan and a mapped buffer that would minimize the impact on the nests.
香蕉视频直播淵ou cannot cut down a heron nest when it is occupied, or for five years after the last known occupancy, because they might come back,香蕉视频直播 she says. 香蕉视频直播淎nd that香蕉视频直播檚 because they香蕉视频直播檙e perennial nesters. They come back to the same sites year after year, as long as they香蕉视频直播檙e not being disturbed.香蕉视频直播
In addition to B.C.香蕉视频直播檚 Wildlife Act, two other pieces of legislation apply to heron nests.
The federal Migratory Birds Act prohibits the destruction or disturbance of nests.
The designates heron nests as wildlife habitat features, and states that 香蕉视频直播渇orest and range activities must not damage or render ineffective a wildlife habitat feature.香蕉视频直播 The order prescribes buffer zones for blue herons depending on the level of disturbance, in this case 200-to-300 metres.
Machmer says the number of active heron香蕉视频直播檚 nests in the Columbia Basin decreased by 40 per cent between 2003 and 2017, down from 286 to 173. She says this is due to development a disturbance.
Herons compete with other stick-nesting birds (bald eagles, ospreys, cormorants) for breeding sites and are gradually getting squeezed into smaller and smaller areas, she says. Herons settle into one area, then the area is developed, and they have to move on because they are sensitive and cannot compete.
香蕉视频直播淚t香蕉视频直播檚 like musical nests, they get chased around the landscape. They can never settle in. This affects their reproductive success and has led to population declines.香蕉视频直播
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bill.metcalfe@nelsonstar.com
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