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The Northwest Territories Species at Risk Committee met in Fort Smith, Northwest Territories on April 5, 2017 and assessed the biological status of barren-ground caribou and Porcupine caribou in the Northwest Territories (including the Tuktoyaktuk Peninsula, Cape Bathurst, Bluenose-West, Bluenose-East, Bathurst, Beverly, Ahiak, and Qamanirjuaq herds).The assessment was based on this approved status report. The assessment process and objective biological criteria used by the Species at Risk Committee are available at: www.nwtspeciesatrisk.ca.
Barren-Ground Caribou Assessment: Threatened in the Northwest Territories
Likely to become endangered in the Northwest Territories if nothing is done to reverse the factors leading to its extirpation or extinction.
Reasons for the assessment: Barren-ground caribou fit criterion (a) for Threatened.
(a) There is evidence that the population is declining in such a way that it could disappear from the Northwest Territories in our children‘s lifetime.
Main Factors:
Additional Factors:
This document contains a table compiled based on information shared by ACCWM Member Boards on November 17, 2020, during the 5th Annual Status Meeting under the framework of the Taking Care of Caribou: The Cape Bathurst, Bluenose-West, and Bluenose-East Barren-ground Caribou Herds Management Plan. This table focuses on the Bluenose-East herd. The table was shared by the ACCWM (Advisory Committee for Cooperation on Wildlife Management)”
This document contains a table compiled based on information shared by ACCWM Member Boards on November 17, 2020, during the 5th Annual Status Meeting under the framework of the Taking Care of Caribou: The Cape Bathurst, Bluenose-West, and Bluenose-East Barren-ground Caribou Herds Management Plan. This table focuses on the Bluenose-West herd. The table was shared by the ACCWM (Advisory Committee for Cooperation on Wildlife Management)”