Government of Canada works with Pacheedaht First Nation to restore wild salmon habitat

News release

May 3, 2019

Port Renfrew, British Columbia — Making our oceans and coasts safer, cleaner and healthier for all Canadians and future generations is a top priority for the Government of Canada.

The Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard, the Honourable Jonathan Wilkinson, announced today that the Pacheedaht First Nation will receive $1.6 million over four years to help restore coastal habitats in the southwest coast in British Columbia.

The project is led by the Pacheedaht First Nation in collaboration with the BC Ministry of Environment and Climate Change, Fisheries and Oceans Canada’s Resource Restoration Unit, Timber West, BC Timber Sales, and with contributions from the Consultant’s Invitational Fishing Derby. It is designed to improve critical estuarine habitats for wild chinook salmon and the availability of prey for the Southern Resident killer whales in the San Juan and Gordon estuaries. This project is broken down into three priorities:

  • Restoring the Channel Connection:  The project will improve the connection of tidal channels in the San Juan and Gordon estuaries which will allow for juvenile salmon to re-connect to downstream eelgrass and sedge habitat. Re-connecting these habitats will increase important rearing areas for all salmon including chinook and chum salmon.
  • Restoring Vegetation: The project will restore eelgrass beds that were historically present the San Juan and Gordon River estuaries. This habitat will provide food, nutrients and cover for fish from predators. It will result in an increase in juvenile salmon surviving and migrating to sea to return as adult and providing more abundant prey for the Southern Resident killer whales.
  • Rehabilitation of Forage Fish Habitat: Forage fish are a crucial link in the food supply for juvenile salmon migrating from the rivers to the open ocean, returning adults homing to their birth stream, and seabirds and marine mammals. Enhancing the habitat that forage fish live in will provide a greater abundance of prey for both wild Pacific salmon and the Southern Resident killer whales.

In May 2017, the Government of Canada announced the $75 million Coastal Restoration Fund, under the Oceans Protection Plan, to help rehabilitate some of our most vulnerable coastlines and protect marine life and ecosystems. The Coastal Restoration Fund supports projects that help to reestablish habitats for fish on all of Canada’s coasts with preference given to projects that involve a broad number of partners, including Indigenous organizations.

Launched in November 2016, the five-year, $1.5-billion Oceans Protection Plan is the largest investment ever made to protect Canada’s coasts and waterways. Over the past two years, the Government of Canada has invested in hundreds of projects that are making our marine safety system stronger, and protecting our coastal environments and marine species more than ever before. Based on the latest science and technology, Indigenous partnerships and collaboration, those projects bring us closer to healthier, cleaner and safer oceans.

Quotes

“Our government is committed to protecting our coasts – that’s why we’re investing in important projects like this under our Oceans Protection Plan. I am pleased that in collaboration with the Pacheedaht First Nation we are working to restore the habitats used by wild Pacific salmon and the Southern Resident killer whale. It’s by working together, that we will build a healthy and more sustainable ocean for generations to come”

The Honourable Jonathan Wilkinson, Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard

“Pacheedaht First Nation is grateful to be a recipient of Canada’s Coastal Restoration Fund. This long term funding will enable the Pacheedaht First Nation and the collaborative partnership of the San Juan Roundtable to further augment Pacheedaht’s habitat stewardship role in the restoration of chinook salmon habitat, and the enhancement of the critical ecological linkages in the food chain that will benefit Southern Resident killer whales. Projects will include the reconnection of vital estuarine channels, augmentation of estuarine vegetation and the enhancement of forage fish habitat.”

Jeff Jones, Pacheedaht Chief Councillor

Quick facts

  • This project aims to restore and improve connectivity of fish habitat in high priority tidal channels to improve ecological and hydrological function and to increase early marine rearing for chinook, coho, chum and pink salmon.

  • Activities include the restoration of marine vegetation through eelgrass planting and salt marsh bench creation, and the enhancement of existing benches to restore degraded and lost habitats.

  • Long-term benefits include an increased knowledge and capacity of the Pacheedaht First Nation, San Juan Roundtable and local community to restore and monitor important coastal habitats.

Associated links

Contacts

Jocelyn Lubczuk
Press Secretary
Office of the Minister of Fisheries, Oceans
and the Canadian Coast Guard
343-548-7863
Jocelyn.Lubczuk@dfo-mpo.gc.ca

Media Relations
Fisheries and Oceans Canada
613-990-7537
Media.xncr@dfo-mpo.gc.ca

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