Protected Areas Backgrounder
Environment Canada
Canada's Nature Treasures
Canada has a wealth of wildlife, forests, and water. Our rich
natural heritage is recognized around the world and contributes
to the quality of life that Canadians enjoy. Aboriginal people
enjoy a sacred relationship with nature, and Canadians view nature
as part of our national identity. It helps define Canada as a nation.
Protecting this natural legacy for future generations of Canadians
is a critical but challenging task. Our growing network of National
Parks protects many of our natural treasures. Stewardship measures
help conserve and protect nature, and active partnerships with
many organizations ensure that Canada's vast stretches of wilderness
remain unspoiled.
Canada also has many programs to protect habitat and species at
risk. These are complemented by the new Species at Risk Act, which
gives Canadians another tool to help conserve and protect nature.
To protect our rich natural legacy, we must all work together. 
Our Protected areas
Canada's wilderness contains some of the most vital habitats in
North America. They include critical habitat for species at risk,
and some highly fragmented landscapes.
Some 20 per cent of the world's
remaining natural areas are located in Canada, along with nine
per cent of the world's
freshwater and 15 per cent of its forests. Protecting these spaces
and their unique features is essential to the survival of biodiversity
in many parts of Canada.
Canada has a long history of establishing protected areas. Banff,
Canada's first National Park, was established in 1885. North America's
first wildfowl sanctuary was created in 1887 at Last Mountain Lake
in Saskatchewan. Currently, about eight per cent of Canada, or
about 80 million hectares, enjoys some kind of protection.
Since 1992, over 24 million hectares - an area about the size
of the United Kingdom - have been added to federal, provincial
and territorial systems of protected areas. Sites range from small
woodlots in southern Canada to huge wilderness areas in northern
regions. The National Parks system continues to grow with the announcement
of new Parks and National Marine Conservation Areas.
National Wildlife Areas
Environment Canada and the Canadian Wildlife Service operate a
network of 143 national wildlife areas and migratory bird sanctuaries
across Canada. This network contains some of the most vital migratory
bird habitat in Canada, and critical habitat for species at risk. In
many cases, these are often the last remaining natural ecosystem
components, like the
sand dune and mixed prairie habitat at CFB Suffield National Wildlife
Area, home to 14 species at risk in Canada, including the Burrowing
Owl and the Ferruginous Hawk. Covering 11.9 million hectares, the
size of Nova Scotia and New Brunswick combined, national wildlife
areas make up the second largest network of protected areas in
Canada, after the National Parks system.
No one government or department can work alone to protect the
wildlife and natural habitats that Canadians treasure so dearly.
Interdepartmental, intergovernmental, multi-sector and international
cooperation is essential. Many organizations, both public and private,
make important contributions. Their commitment is encouraging.
The recently approved CFB Suffield National Wildlife area is an
excellent example of how government departments can work together
to develop cost-effective conservation agreements to protect significant
areas of wildlife habitat. Located in southern Alberta, the CFB
Suffield NWA provides long-term security for the last large piece
of unploughed prairie grassland in prairie Canada. |