logo
Venturing into Khutzeymateen: Canada's only grizzly bear sanctuary

Venturing into Khutzeymateen: Canada's only grizzly bear sanctuary

Hidden deep in northwest B.C.'s coast lies the lush inlet of the Khutzeymateen, bustling with grizzly bears and other rich fauna.
Created in 1994 as the first specially protected area for grizzly bears and their habitat in Canada, it is widely regarded as the densest natural grizzly bear habitat in North America. The sanctuary is located about 45 kilometres northeast of Prince Rupert and only is accessible by boat or plane.
The Gits'iis tribe of the Lax Kw'alaams Band has been the steward of this region for thousands of years. The area became protected through an agreement with the B.C. Government and the Tsimshian First Nation three decades ago, and has helped conserve the grizzly bear population that calls the Khutzeymateen their home, as well as preserve the social, ceremonial, and cultural uses of the Coast Tsimshian who depend on the area.
Two rangers from the Tsimshian Gits'iis tribe are situated at the K'tzim-a-deen Ranger Station at Khutzeymateen Inlet — K'tzim-a-deen translates to 'valley at the head of the inlet' in the Tsimshian language of the Gits'iis people. They keep track of bear sightings and any commercial activity, monitoring people's behaviours around the bears and staying involved in the ecology of the area.
Each year from May to the end of July, Prince Rupert Adventure Tours takes passengers on their yellow catamaran to one of the only places on the planet where grizzly bears can be observed in their natural habitat, living freely in the wilderness.
Khutzeymateen is also a vibrant haven for bald eagles, seals, sea lions, orcas, humpback whales and mountain goats, while coastal wolves also roam the rugged landscape. Nearby waters invite glimpses of majestic whales and playful dolphins, showcasing the area's rich biodiversity.
The bears of Khutzeymateen
Jasmine Newton, a tour guide with Prince Rupert Adventure Tours, mentioned that between the 40 to 50 bears that roam the 45,000 hectare sanctuary, some of them can be territorial.
'We've seen that happen with some of the females that we know really well. Hot Chocolate is a bear [and] she's got a son named Marshmallow who we watched almost every day last year, and so we've noticed kind of fluctuations with them.
'Usually grizzly bears will kick out their young at about two to three years, but she kicked him out a little bit early, and so we kind of saw them moving between different territories. Last year. He kept trying to follow her and get back on her good side and spend time with mom again, but she wouldn't let him.'
The sanctuary mainly has grizzlies, but there have been sightings of black bears before, However, grizzlies do not like to associate with black bears, so when their paths do cross — typically at the beginning of the season right when grizzlies come out of hibernation — it can be fatal for black bears.
'Some of the bears are transitory, so they'll move in and out. Most of them are resident bears, we think so. They'll have their dens up in the alpine habitats, and they'll stay there for five months out of the year. The rest of the time, they're down along the shorelines hunting for salmon.
'From July onwards, they're looking for berries around this time of year, in the very beginning of the season. They like things like skunk cabbages and bulbous roots, and sedge grass is a really important part of their diet.' They forage for shellfish and clams and consume about 40 to 60 pounds of protein-rich sedge grass each day. Salmon is the most important part of their diet, while the other things they eat help sustain them. Newton shared that without salmon, the bears would not be able to build enough body fat to last through hibernation.
Threats to the sanctuary's bears
'Grizzly bear habitat used to be all over North America, specifically in B.C. It used to go all the way down to Vancouver. But they've been pushed out of their territory by human encroachment, building cities and especially extractive industries like pipelines. This is one of the last intact grizzly bear habitats in North America,' said Newton.
Overfishing in northern coastal waters also poses a significant threat to the grizzlies, the salmon populations and the sanctuary itself.
'Something that has been on my mind recently is that we have lots of bottom trawler licenses in the Chatham Sound. If you look at bottom trawling, it's a really unsustainable practice of fishing that contributes to a lot of the overfishing we see here, specifically for salmon,' said Newton.
Bottom trawling was
banned
in all new Canadian Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) established after April 25, 2018. However, the ban does not apply retroactively to MPAs established before that date.
'Without the healthy salmon populations, the bears would not survive here. The reason the bears do so well here and on a broader level, in northern B.C., is because we have some of the largest intact rivers here, like the Skeena and the Nass.'
Newton is also an Environmental Studies and Indigenous Studies double-major at the University of Victoria. She stressed the present threat of climate change that will impact the sanctuary in the future.
'With climate change comes a lot of animals and tons of wildlife that are going to be forced from down south to up north, to a sanctuary such as this, so we might not have enough intact ecosystems to support that, as well as, connectability, so there might not be safe passages for these wildlife to come up from down south.'
She also brought up how the bears are not hibernating as long as they should in the winter due to winters being warmer in recent years.
'They're generally not going to go out and kill a moose, so they're not going to have a major food source through the wintertime. They could dig for grass or roots underneath the snow, but then they'd have to waste energy going down the mountainside. So it's better for them to just go through hibernation, but they have to have enough salmon in order to do that.'
Eco-tourism
BC Parks, Lax Kw'alaams and Commercial Bear Viewing Guides work in collaboration to ensure the Khutzeymateen Protected Areas are managed proactively and public access be monitored conservatively to ensure the grizzly bears and their habitats are the first priority.
In 1994, Captain Doug Davis founded, Prince Rupert Adventure Tours, a marine ecotourism business to showcase the amazing wildlife and scenery of the Pacific Northwest.
Bear viewing guides, like Captain Davis', contribute a per person donation to the Khutzeymateen Park Enhancement Fund (KPEF), which supports
shared stewardship initiatives
for the area.
'Any tourism business at its core is a little bit extractive. There is always going to be some impact, whether that be from our fuel emissions or our presence itself. But, I think our impact is very minimal,' said Newton.
'It's all on a sliding scale in my brain for tourism, because if you look down south in the Victoria and Vancouver area, whale watching has been detrimental, especially to the southern resident killer whales,' she said. 'Up here, it's not exactly the same because we're the only tourist boat of this scale for hundreds of kilometres.'
She added, 'The boat was custom-made to minimize sound disturbance underwater and above water for the bears, and to prioritize fuel efficiency.'
The captain says bear sightings have been fairly steady throughout his 30-year career. The month of May also witnesses the mating season.
The tour typically sees between five and 10 bear sightings each trip. However, every day is different with no guarantees. The tour boat observes precautions to minimally disturb the environment around it.
Its primary goal was to leave the grizzly bears and the inlet in the same natural state they found it.
Note: This article is co-written with Harvin Bhathal of the Terrace Standard.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Under the Radar New Zealand Wines to Seek Out Now
Under the Radar New Zealand Wines to Seek Out Now

New York Times

time2 days ago

  • New York Times

Under the Radar New Zealand Wines to Seek Out Now

The modern history of New Zealand wine is surprisingly short, particularly here on the South Island, home to regions like Central Otago and North Canterbury that, in just a few decades, have shown themselves capable of producing stunning wines. Only in the 1960s, at the same time Napa Valley in California was beginning its ascent, did New Zealand make it legal to drink wine in restaurants. In the 1970s, the government sponsored a program to transform vineyards, pulling out lackluster hybrid grapes that had been used to make cheap fortified wines, which accounted for the vast proportion of production, and to replace them with vinifera, the species of all the best-known wine grapes. Still, by 1998, when Napa's cult cabernets were making themselves irresistible to wealthy consumers, only about 10 vineyards existed in Central Otago, a region better known for its access to winter sports in the mountain range known as the Southern Alps. 'Vineyards were met with a degree of incredulity,' said Duncan Forsyth, the proprietor of Mount Edward Winery in Gibbston in Central Otago, who arrived in the region in 1992 to ski and never left. 'There was a disbelief you could grow grapes.' New Zealand today is best known for its sharp, pungent sauvignon blancs, particularly those from the Marlborough region in the northeastern-most part of the South Island. Those have proven wildly popular around the world, but they are most often mass-produced commodities and, to my mind, a rather limited calling card for a country capable of producing such distinctive wines. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Greece fights massive wildfire crisis as heatwave devastates southern Europe
Greece fights massive wildfire crisis as heatwave devastates southern Europe

News24

time2 days ago

  • News24

Greece fights massive wildfire crisis as heatwave devastates southern Europe

Greece struggled to control over 20 wildfires, including one near its third-largest city, Patras, fueled by a severe heatwave affecting southern Europe. Fires led to widespread evacuations, hospitalisations for respiratory problems and burns, and damage to tourist locations. The heatwave affecting Greece, Spain, Portugal, Britain, and other nations has been linked to climate change. Greece on Wednesday battled to contain more than 20 wildfires including one menacing its third-largest city Patras as a heatwave stoked blazes and forced the evacuation of thousands in southern Europe. Spain, Portugal, France, Italy, the Balkans and Britain have this week wilted in high temperatures that fuel wildfires and which scientists say human-induced climate change is intensifying. Since dawn on Wednesday, 4 850 firefighters and 33 planes were mobilised across Greece on what promised to be 'a very difficult day', fire service spokesman Vassilis Vathrakogiannis said. A fire near the ancient Mycenaean archaeological site of Voudeni, just 7km from Patras, threatened forested zones and homes, and the area was covered by a thick cloud of smoke, an AFP journalist reported. Fierce wind 'is hampering the task of water bombers, and is making collecting water at sea more difficult', the president of the firefighter officers' union, Kostas Tsigkas, told public broadcaster ERT. READ | 3 dead, thousands evacuate as huge wildfires, heatwave hit Europe In the western Achaia region in the Peloponnese, to which the coastal city of Patras belongs, around 20 villages were evacuated on Tuesday. Other fronts were burning on the popular tourist island of Zante and the Aegean island of Chios, scarred by a huge wildfire in June that ravaged more than 4 000 hectares. The Greek coastguard said it had helped evacuate nearly 80 people from Chios and near Patras. The national ambulance service reported 52 hospitalisations from Achaia, Chios and the western town of Preveza, including 'a small number of firefighters', mostly for respiratory problems and minor burns. Temperatures are due to come close to 40°C in parts of western Greece on Wednesday, including the northwest Peloponnese, national weather service EMY forecast. After Greece requested four water bombers from the EU Civil Protection Mechanism to bolster its resources, leftist opposition party Syriza criticised the conservative government's preparation for the fires that hit every year. Greece needed 'a bold redistribution of resources in favour of civil protection', an 'emphasis on prevention', better coordination and new technologies in its civil protection system, Syriza said. 'Worst breeding ground' At the other end of the Mediterranean, wildfires continued to dominate the news in Spain, where cooler temperatures and greater humidity were expected to help control blazes in which two people have died. Authorities in the northwestern region of Castile and Leon, where flames have threatened a world heritage Roman mining site, said almost 6 000 people from 26 localities had been evacuated from their homes. Bushy undergrowth and searing temperatures that have baked Spain for almost two weeks had created 'the worst possible breeding ground for this situation', Castile and Leon's civil protection head Irene Cortes said. Costas Baltas/Anadolu via Getty Images A total of 199 wildfires have scorched nearly 98 784 hectares across Spain this year, more than double the area burned during the same period in 2024. Neighbouring Portugal deployed more than 1 800 firefighters and around 20 aircraft against five major blazes, with efforts focused on a blaze in the central municipality of Trancoso that has raged since Saturday. Strong gusts of wind had rekindled flames overnight and threatened nearby villages, where television images showed locals volunteering to help the firefighters under a thick cloud of smoke. 'It's scary... but we are always ready to help each other,' a mask-wearing farmer told Sic Noticias television, holding a spade in his hand. Italian firefighters had extinguished a blaze that burned for five days on the famed Mount Vesuvius and spewed plumes of smoke over the Naples area. In Britain, temperatures were expected to peak at 34°C in the country's fourth heatwave of the summer. The UK Health Security Agency warned of 'significant impacts' on health and social care services for the parts of central and southeastern England where the harshest heat was forecast.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store