Wildlife Connectivity

Documenting change in wild places and developing tools to strengthen ecosystem resilience for wildlife and people.

Mission

To work together to reverse regional biodiversity loss and restore ecosystem health through ecological connectivity networks and corridors, for the benefit of all living beings.

Why is this important?

Habitat fragmentation and environmental degradation, driven by expanding human activity and more frequent wildfires, now affect over 30% of forests and freshwater ecosystems in the southern Coast Mountains. Nearly 10% of dependent plant and animal species are considered threatened or at risk of extirpation, signalling a landscape nearing the limits of its resilience.

While biodiversity loss may not be fully reversible, restoring ecological connectivity offers a path to resilience. Connectivity networks help support wildlife movement and sustain essential ecological processes across landscapes by linking protected areas and healthy habitats through dedicated wildlife corridors.

How are we contributing?

Connected Landscapes for Wildlife and People

A key project output is a regional strategy for ecosystem resilience. The strategy is based on target criteria documenting changes in ecosystem health and integrity over the past 40 years. It also incorporates the potential to restore wildlife movement patterns and the flow of natural processes through ecological connectivity networks and corridors.

From Strategy to Stewardship

The strategy is supported by EcoScapes, our online learning resource hub, and by a companion report containing guidelines intended to inform ongoing conservation planning and community-based land stewardship in our region.

Volunteer Opportunities

We’re committed to sharing the results of our work and learning from others’ connections with and knowledge about regional wildlife habitat and movement patterns.

You can explore your impact on our EcoScapes portal and contribute observations to iNaturalist.

Questions about this project?

Reach out to our Project Coordinator

Murray Journeay

wildlife@naturesquamish.ca

Who are we working with?

The Wildlife Connectivity Project (2022-2026) was a community-based initiative led by Nature Squamish in partnership with the Howe Sound Biosphere Region Initiative Society, the Sḵwx̱wú7mesh Úxwumixw (Squamish Nation), the District of Squamish, the Squamish-Lillooet Regional District, the Squamish Community Forest. Project oversight was provided by a Steering Committee which included the project partners, other NGOs and government agencies with a shared mandate for biodiversity conservation.

A technical working group of approximately 25 researchers and practitioners from a range of academic, private, and public sector organizations supported the project by advising on overall approach and planning and assessment methodologies.

The project was made possible through direct funding from project partners, private donations, and five foundations, as well as in-kind contributions from Nature Squamish.

To work together to reverse regional biodiversity loss and restore ecosystem health through ecological connectivity networks and corridors, for the benefit of all living beings.

Get Involved

Interested in getting involved? Contact us to learn more and/or contribute as a volunteer this or other projects.