The Species at Risk Act (2002) and Transboundary Species Listings along the US–Canada Border

Author:

Raymond Sarah1ORCID,Perkins Sarah E.1ORCID,Garrard Greg2

Affiliation:

1. School of Biosciences, Cardiff University, Sir Martin Evans Building, Cardiff CF10 3AX, UK

2. Department of English and Cultural Studies, The University of British Columbia, Kelowna, BC V1V 1V7, Canada

Abstract

This paper is a collaborative interdisciplinary examination of the scientific, political, and cultural determinants of the conservation status of mammal species that occur in both Canada and the USA. We read Canada’s Species at Risk Act as a document of bio-cultural nationalism circumscribed by the weak federalism and Crown–Indigenous relations of the nation’s constitution. We also provide a numerical comparison of at-risk species listings either side of the US–Canada border and examples of provincial/state listings in comparison with those at a federal level. We find 17 mammal species listed as at-risk in Canada as distinct from the USA, and only 6 transboundary species that have comparable levels of protection in both countries, and we consider several explanations for this asymmetry. We evaluate the concept of ‘jurisdictional rarity’, in which species are endangered only because a geopolitical boundary isolates a small population. The paper begins and ends with reflections on interdisciplinary collaboration, and our findings highlight the importance of considering and explicitly acknowledging political influences on science and conservation-decision making, including in the context of at-risk-species protection.

Funder

UKRI Mitacs Globalink Research exchange programme

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference56 articles.

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3. Bunnell, Fred L., Campbell, R. Wayne, and Squires, Kelly (, January March). Allocating Scarce Resources for Conservation in a Species-rich Environment: Guidelines from History and Science. Paper presented at the Species at Risk 2004 Pathways to Recovery Conference, Victoria, BC, Canada.

4. CDC (2023, August 02). BC Species & Ecosystems Explorer, Available online: https://a100.gov.bc.ca/pub/eswp/.

5. Rapid Range Shifts of Species Associated with High Levels of Climate Warming;Chen;Science,2011

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