5 épisodes

The Bull Trout Show is a podcast series that tells the story of the bull trout and the decades of efforts to recover this native species. Journalist Cheryl Croucher interviews the players, including fisheries scientists who spent their careers raising the alarm over the demise of native species like the bull trout. The bull trout, Salvelinus confluentus, is Alberta’s official fish. This native trout species, believed to have inhabited the waterways of present-day Alberta since the last Ice Age, once populated streams and rivers from the Rocky Mountain headwaters well onto the prairies. European settlement starting in the 1800’s changed that, with settlers deeming the bull trout a ‘garbage fish’ that ought to be extirpated in favour of other trout. In the 1960’s and 1970’s, naturalists and fishers in Alberta documented the decline of the species, and in the early 1980’s, they initiated the first efforts to urge the provincial government to protect the species in Alberta. Despite nearly 40 years of local and national scientific advocacy to protect the species, where there were once thriving populations of bull trout, today there may be only a handful or even none in the waterways where they once thrived. In 2019, the Department of Fisheries and Oceans (now Fisheries and Oceans Canada) declared the bull trout a threatened species under the Species At Risk Act, acting on a recommendation from the Committee on the Status ofEndangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC) issued in 2012. The Government of Canada subsequently issued a species recovery strategy for the Saskatchewan-Nelson River bull trout population in 2020, and in 2021 a species critical habitat order was issued.

The Bull Trout Show The Bull Trout Show

    • Society & Culture
    • 4,0 • 1 note

The Bull Trout Show is a podcast series that tells the story of the bull trout and the decades of efforts to recover this native species. Journalist Cheryl Croucher interviews the players, including fisheries scientists who spent their careers raising the alarm over the demise of native species like the bull trout. The bull trout, Salvelinus confluentus, is Alberta’s official fish. This native trout species, believed to have inhabited the waterways of present-day Alberta since the last Ice Age, once populated streams and rivers from the Rocky Mountain headwaters well onto the prairies. European settlement starting in the 1800’s changed that, with settlers deeming the bull trout a ‘garbage fish’ that ought to be extirpated in favour of other trout. In the 1960’s and 1970’s, naturalists and fishers in Alberta documented the decline of the species, and in the early 1980’s, they initiated the first efforts to urge the provincial government to protect the species in Alberta. Despite nearly 40 years of local and national scientific advocacy to protect the species, where there were once thriving populations of bull trout, today there may be only a handful or even none in the waterways where they once thrived. In 2019, the Department of Fisheries and Oceans (now Fisheries and Oceans Canada) declared the bull trout a threatened species under the Species At Risk Act, acting on a recommendation from the Committee on the Status ofEndangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC) issued in 2012. The Government of Canada subsequently issued a species recovery strategy for the Saskatchewan-Nelson River bull trout population in 2020, and in 2021 a species critical habitat order was issued.

    05 - The Long Slow Battle to Protect Bull Trout with Peter Rodger

    05 - The Long Slow Battle to Protect Bull Trout with Peter Rodger

    It was the early 1990’s when concern over the decimation of Alberta’s bull trout populations reached a critical mass.  Fisheries biologists raised the alarm, rallying anglers and the conservation community to save the bull trout.  They hosted conferences and printed public awareness posters in an effort to pressure policy makers to enact regulations that would protect bull trout from overharvesting and habitat degradation   These advocates even mounted a campaign to convince the provincial government to name the bull trout as Alberta’s official fish.   But despite all this momentum, it still took almost three more decades for regulators to designate the bull trout as a threatened species under Canada’s Species At Risk Act.  Why did this take so long?  Peter Rodger is a Senior Species At Risk biologist with Fisheries and Oceans Canada.  Peter picked up the bull trout file when he moved to the department’s Winnipeg office in 2014.  Turns out, designating a species as threatened is an arduous, complex process that requires patience and cooperation between both federal and provincial regulators.  Journalist Cheryl Croucher spoke with Peter Rodger about the long slow battle to protect bull trout. 

    (Duration:  53:33)

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    WEBSITE: www.RestoryingBullTrout.ca

    WHERE TO LISTEN:  Buzz Sprout, Apple, Spotify,  Overcast, Castro, Castbox,  Pocket Cast, Goodpods and Podfriend

    FUNDING CREDIT:   Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada New Frontiers in Research Fund.     

    The project is called: Plural perspectives on Bighorn Country: Restor(y)ing land use, governance, and bull trout population health in Alberta. 

    • 53 min
    04 - Death By A Thousand Cuts with Lorne Fitch

    04 - Death By A Thousand Cuts with Lorne Fitch

    The forest reserve along Alberta’s eastern slopes was established over a century ago, in part to protect the watersheds that provide water for drinking and agricultural activity further downstream.  Yes, it is a human-centric perspective, but one that seemed to work until recent years.  In the 21st century, gone is the true wilderness of Bighorn Country, marred by countless intrusions allowing human access for industry and recreation that have led to landscape degradation.   Among the casualties of this assault on the watersheds of the Bighorn is the bull trout. Lorne Fitch looks to native fish as sentinels calling out the impact of land use changes.  Lorne is a professional biologist and author with a lifelong connection to Bighorn Country.   He has experienced the decline of bull trout populations from the thousands to almost none in his own lifetime.  Is there any hope for recovery? Lorne believes that requires a societal shift towards a conservation ethic and an acceptance that landscapes have limits and constraints, that they cannot be all things to all people all the time.  Journalist and host of The Bull Trout Show Cheryl Croucher asked Lorne Fitch to pinpoint when things went wrong in the Bighorn and if it is too late for the bull trout. 

    • 27 min
    03 - The Life And Times Of The Iconic Native Bull Trout with Lorne Fitch

    03 - The Life And Times Of The Iconic Native Bull Trout with Lorne Fitch

    Would you know a bull trout if you saw one?  Most anglers fishing the streams of Alberta’s eastern slopes have never seen or caught a bull trout.  Yet this now rare and threatened species once populated the streams of Bighorn Country by the thousands.  The culprit behind this extirpation since the 1950’s is human interference, including overfishing, introduction of non-native species, draining of wetlands for agriculture, industrial development in the forest reserve, and recreational activity.  Just a bit of silt in a stream can smother eggs in a spawning bed or redd.  Hanging culverts where roads cross creeks can prevent fish from migrating up or down stream to feed or spawn.  One person with intimate knowledge of the life and trials of the native bull trout is biologist, author, and conservation advocate Lorne Fitch.   In speaking with The Bull Trout Show’s host Cheryl Croucher, Lorne describes the bull trout as looking like “a torpedo with fins”. 

    • 33 min
    02 - There Once Was An Exuberance Of Fish with Lorne Fitch

    02 - There Once Was An Exuberance Of Fish with Lorne Fitch

    Lorne Fitch is a keen observer of the natural world, a conservationist, and a man of many stories.  He is author of the new book “Streams of Consequence: Dispatches from the Conservation World”.  Indeed, the streams of Alberta’s eastern slopes were Lorne’s childhood playground.  That is where he learned to fish and first encountered the bull trout of Bighorn Country.  As a young man, he turned his passion for the outdoors into a lifelong career as a professional biologist and Fish and Wildlife Officer with the Province of Alberta.  Lorne’s career paralleled the decline of native bull trout as human access and industrial development encroached dramatically into the forests of the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains. Journalist Cheryl Croucher talked with Lorne Fitch about the changes he has observed over his lifetime. 

    • 36 min
    01 - Bull Trout, Bighorn Country And Bounty Lost with Dr. Zoe Todd

    01 - Bull Trout, Bighorn Country And Bounty Lost with Dr. Zoe Todd

    You’ll find Bighorn Country along the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains in Alberta.  Bull trout flourished in the rivers and streams of the Bighorn from the last ice age until the mid-twentieth century.  That’s when bull trout succumbed to the impact of increased human access to the forested wildlands and the industrial and tourist development that followed.  Recent mitigation and conservation efforts are focused on recovering bull trout and other native salmonid species.  But there’s more to this fish story than biology and habitat restoration. There are the links to indigenous culture, human storytelling, and our connection to the land.  These form the basis of a unique social science research project called “Plural perspectives on Bighorn Country: Restor(y)ing land use, governance, and bull trout population health in Alberta”.  The project is supported by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada New Frontiers in Research Fund.  To learn more about Restor(y)ing Bull Trout, journalist Cheryl Croucher spoke with co-investigator Dr. Zoe Todd, a Metis scholar, fish philosopher, and Associate Professor of Indigenous Studies at Simon Fraser University in British Columbia.  

    • 23 min

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