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Wildlife Guidelines
for Backcountry Tourism/Commercial Recreation
Changes from Interim Guidelines
The following is a list of substantive
differences between the current draft guidelines and
the Interim wildlife
guidelines for commercial backcountry recreation in
British Columbia, published by the Ministry
of Water, Land and Air Protection in 2002:
- Guidelines are presented as a series of
hyperlinked web pages to allow users to navigate
quickly to relevant
information.
- Guideline development was framed by a
strategy that:
- Addressed concerns of stakeholders raised after
the release of the Interim
Guidelines.
- Provided a context for the guidelines in relation
to other legal and policy tools.
- Stressed a results-based approach based on
precautionary defaults and the development of
operational strategies.
- Guidelines were developed with extensive input
from commercial and public recreationists.
- Guidelines have been expanded to include both
wildlife and their habitats.
- Rather than a species-by-species approach,
guidelines are stratified by categories
of recreational activity and secondarily by broad habitat
types. Cross-references
to individual species have
been included, along with background information and
references from the Interim
Guidelines.
- Guidelines for different recreational
activities are presented in a consistent format and
are stratified
into 5 issues categories:
- Degradation of soil, air and water quality
- Integrity of vegetation communities
- Direct disturbance of wildlife
- Integrity of fisheries resources
- Special management (addition guidelines for
specific values of concern)
- References to facilities development in
the Interim Guidelines were
removed.
- “Management objectives”, “impact
mitigation guidelines” and success indicators” have
been replaced with “results”, “desired
behaviours”, “indicators” and “limits”.
- Guidelines not directly related to recreation
activities or to the responsibilities of commercial
recreation operators and public recreationists have
been removed.
- Default approach distances have
been standardized to:
- 500 m line-of-sight for aircraft and
all wildlife (except 1500 m for Mountain Goats,
based on recent
scientific work from Alaska).
- 500 m line-of-sight for motorized ground-based
activities in open areas in relation to large mammals.
- 100 m line-of-sight for non-motorized
ground-based activities in open areas in relation
to large mammals.
- 100 m on water (consistent with bear-viewing
guidelines).
- In all cases the desired behaviour is stay
at distances sufficient to prevent changes in
the behaviour of animals.
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