Quebec builds fences around caribou as experts decry lack of habitat protection
MONTREAL — The Quebec government’s decision to fence in another endangered caribou herd and to kill any wolves that approach the animals is worrying environmentalists, who say the province is again delaying a long-promised plan to re-establish the species.
After putting a fence around the habitat of the seven animals that remain in a herd in Val d’Or, Que., the government says herds in the Charlevoix and Gaspé regions will be next to live behind enclosures.
The Wildlife Department confirmed that construction is underway to fence in the entire herd in Charlevoix, north of Quebec City, which is estimated at less than 20 animals. In Gaspé, the whole herd will not be enclosed but pregnant females will be captured and transported to fenced-in areas where they’ll give birth and raise their young for a few months before being released in the fall.
The government has also hired a trapping group, the Fédération des trappeurs gestionnaires du Québec, to “intensify” a program of trapping and killing wolves and other predators that threaten the caribou.