April 29, 2014

PHOTO: Parks Canada
A wolf pack uses the wildlife underpass along Highway 93 South in Kootenay National Park.

However, images from the past winter show a known wolf pack — believed to have about a dozen members — regularly using the structures in the Dolly Varden area, about 35 kilometres south from the south gate of the park near Radium, B.C. “First, it was just wolves walking by and then wolves investigating and then they started using them,” said Kinley. “Over the course of the winter, we had 14 different times that the wolves crossed — sometimes it’s just one wolf and other times it’s six or seven at a time. They used all three crossing structures.”

Wildlife crossing structures have reduced wildlife-vehicle collisions by 80 per cent in Banff National Park, where there’s a total of six overpasses and 38 underpasses along the Trans-Canada Highway from the east gate to the border of Yoho National Park.
Kinley said it’s too early to say whether it’s led to fewer animals being hit on the busy highway in Kootenay.

Officials will continue to monitor the structures for other wildlife crossings. “The bears are out, the whitetail deer are back in the park so we’ll see a different compliment of animals,” said Kinley. “We’ve been really encouraged by what we’ve seen so far. They are not huge numbers yet of everything, but we’re getting some use, which is fantastic. And the wolves, actually, I was surprised at how much use we had in the first year.”
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In case you want to see more, here’s a short video put together by Parks Canada:
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