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Commercial Huckleberry Harvesting Restrictions

Contributor
By Contributor
July 24th, 2018

The provincial government is restricting commercial-scale huckleberry harvesting to protect grizzly bear habitat, including several locales in the East Kootenay.

From July 15 to Oct. 15, commercial-scale picking of huckleberries is prohibited in some areas of the Kootenay Boundary region, including Little Moyie and Kid Creek west of Moyie and Iron Creek/Sand Creek and Sportsman Ridge/Upper Flathead River west and south of Fernie and Monk Creek, west of Creston.

These areas have been identified as critical foraging zones for grizzly bears and other wildlife species. These areas are also of traditional high value to First Nations, said a Ministry of Forests, Lands, Natural Resource Operations and Rural Development press release.

The BC Wildlife Federation supports the ban on commercial huckleberry picking and leaving the harvest for First Nations as well as home use by B.C. families.

Huckleberries are an important component of the grizzly bear diet. To ensure grizzly bears and other wildlife are preserved across these landscapes, enforceable forest management objectives are required that maintain forest habitat diversity and productivity. “The ban is a small step forward but does not address the larger habitat issues that influence grizzly bear population status,” stated Harvey Andrusak, President of the BC Wildlife Federation.

See the Commercial Huckleberry Closure Maps>>

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