Canada's Species at Risk Act: An Opportunity to Protect

Canadian salmon are now eligible for protection under a federal Species at Risk Act pro-claimed in June 2003 and fully implemented in June 2004. The act has four major steps dealing with species at risk of extinction: (1) an independent scientific committee assesses biological status and designates...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Endangered Salmon
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.575.4258
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Summary:Canadian salmon are now eligible for protection under a federal Species at Risk Act pro-claimed in June 2003 and fully implemented in June 2004. The act has four major steps dealing with species at risk of extinction: (1) an independent scientific committee assesses biological status and designates those at risk, (2) Federal Cabinet decides, following consid-eration of socioeconomic implications, which species to add to the legal list of species at risk, (3) legal protection, and (4) recovery planning and implementation. The committee has des-ignated five distinct populations of salmon as endangered•ne Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar), one coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch), two sockeye salmon (O. nerka), and one Chinook salmon (O. tshawytscha). Only the Atlantic salmon is currently listed under the act; Cabinet decided not to list the two sockeye after considering socioeconomic mplications and decisions on listing coho and Chinook are pending socioeconomic assessment. Both the Species at Risk Act in Canada and the Endangered Species Act in the United States use mul-tiple criteria to assess the status of units that may be below the taxonomic species level. The Canadian act, in contrast o the act in the United States, mandates a non-governmental com-mittee to assess tatus, separates biology from socioeconomics in the listing process, does not consider socioeconomic onsequences when identifying critical habitat, and has specific timetables for the completion of recovery plans. Canadian salmon managers must now con-sider the effects of fisheries on salmon diversity, resulting in changes to the way fisheries are managed. The enactment of the act has introduced a new process for protecting salmon diversity in Canada, and its continued development and application will provide an interest-ing contrast to salmon conservation efforts in the United States.