South of the Divide
Type of resources
Topics
Keywords
Contact for the resource
Provided by
Years
Formats
Representation types
Update frequencies
status
Service types
-
Saskatchewan sections with sensitive habitat for Species at Risk have been identified. Development will be minimized to protect this sensitive habitat or specific mitigation criteria will be required in cases where avoidance is justifiably not possible. For more information, contact the Fish, Wildlife and Lands Branch or the area Ecological Protection Specialist. A total of 3624 Sections in the Prairie Ecozone in Saskatchewan were identified as Sensitive areas for the following Species at Risk, most current information as of December 2015: Burrowing Owl, Eastern Yellow-bellied Racer, Prairie Loggerhead Shrike, Mountain Plover, Mormon Metalmark, Sprague's Pipit, Swift Fox, Black-footed Ferret, Gold-edged Gem, Greater Sage-Grouse, Greater short-horned lizard, Piping Plover, Slender Mouse-ear-cress, Small-flowered Sand-verbena, Tiny Cryptantha, Dusky Dune Moth and Smooth Goosefoot.
-
A Priority Place is an area of high biodiversity value that is seen as a distinct place with a common ecological theme by the people who live and work there. As part of the Pan-Canadian approach to transforming species at risk conservation in Canada, a total of 11 Priority Places were affirmed by federal, provincial, and territorial governments in December 2018. The places selected have significant biodiversity, concentrations of species at risk, and opportunities to advance conservation efforts. In each Priority Place, the federal and provincial or territorial governments are working with Indigenous Peoples, partners, and stakeholders to develop conservation implementation plans. This dataset captures a small sample of the projects that are underway in these Priority Places. Over time, it will be expanded to include more projects. Some projects span various areas of a Priority Place but are reflected in this dataset as a single center point. This dataset is not to be used for legal purposes.
-
A Priority Place is an area of high biodiversity value that is seen as a distinct place with a common ecological theme by the people who live and work there. As part of the Pan-Canadian approach to transforming Species at Risk conservation in Canada, a total of 11 Priority Places were affirmed by federal, provincial, and territorial governments in December 2018. The places selected have significant biodiversity, concentrations of species at risk, and opportunities to advance conservation efforts. In each Priority Place, the federal and provincial or territorial governments are working with Indigenous Peoples, partners, and stakeholders to develop conservation implementation plans. This dataset displays the geographic area covered by each of the 11 Priority Places using the best available information from the Canadian Wildlife Service (CWS). Boundary information for each Priority Place was provided by its respective CWS regional office. The federal government, in collaboration with the provinces and territories, has agreed to the implementation of the Pan-Canadian Approach to Transforming Species at Risk Conservation in Canada. This new approach shifts from a single-species approach to conservation to one that focuses on multiple species and ecosystems. This enables conservation partners to work together to achieve better outcomes for species at risk. These 11 Priority Places are complemented by a suite of Community-Nominated Priority Places (CNPP), identified through an open call for applications.