Preserve the Peel River Water Shed Area from Development by the Establishment of a Peel River National Park

The Issue

Located at the northern end of the Rocky and Mackenzie Mountain Chain, the Peel River Watershed is a spectacularly rugged region defined by the Peel, Ogilvie, Blackstone, Hart, Wind, Snake and Bonnet Plume rivers. One of Canada's most striking and pristine mountain river watersheds, the Peel is the heart of a great mountain ecosystem with a long cultural history, free-ranging wildlife and a rugged northern beauty. Sprawling over 26,000 square miles (68,000 square kiliometers), or 16 million acres (6.8 million hectares), the Peel Watershed dwarfs more famous landscapes, such as Banff and Yellowstone national parks–in size, unspoiled splendor and ecological integrity.

The Peel Watershed is one of North America's largest intact ecosystems–a region of mountains, deep canyons, plateaus, wetlands and rolling hills laced by rivers. The watershed is the northern anchor of the Yellowstone to Yukon Conservation Initiative, a broad-based international project to protect ecosystem connections for wildlife.

 

Wildlife include a host of high-profile species, such as grizzly bears, wolverines, wolves, Dall sheep and caribou that are at risk elsewhere.

  • The watershed provides essential winter range to the Porcupine Caribou Herd–the same animals that spend their summer raising calves in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
    View the Porcupine Caribou Herd Range and Concentration of Locations
  • It's also home to the Yukon's largest herd of woodland caribou–along with several other notable populations of woodland caribou, a species in decline elsewhere.
  • Extensive wetlands are significant as migratory waterfowl nesting and staging areas, along with necessary habitat for peregrine falcons and other birds of prey and a host of nesting shorebirds and neotropical songbirds.
  • Portions of the Peel Watershed remained ice-free through the Pleistocene Ice Age, a factor contributing to the remarkable plant and animal communities found there today. As the earth faces a new phase of climate change, the Peel Watershed could again become what scientists call a "refugia"–a large, connected and naturally functioning ecosystem providing survivable conditions for species likely to become imperiled elsewhere.

Establishment of a National Park will help preserve this crucial area for generation to come.

 (courtesy of Protect the Peel)

This petition had 135 supporters

The Issue

Located at the northern end of the Rocky and Mackenzie Mountain Chain, the Peel River Watershed is a spectacularly rugged region defined by the Peel, Ogilvie, Blackstone, Hart, Wind, Snake and Bonnet Plume rivers. One of Canada's most striking and pristine mountain river watersheds, the Peel is the heart of a great mountain ecosystem with a long cultural history, free-ranging wildlife and a rugged northern beauty. Sprawling over 26,000 square miles (68,000 square kiliometers), or 16 million acres (6.8 million hectares), the Peel Watershed dwarfs more famous landscapes, such as Banff and Yellowstone national parks–in size, unspoiled splendor and ecological integrity.

The Peel Watershed is one of North America's largest intact ecosystems–a region of mountains, deep canyons, plateaus, wetlands and rolling hills laced by rivers. The watershed is the northern anchor of the Yellowstone to Yukon Conservation Initiative, a broad-based international project to protect ecosystem connections for wildlife.

 

Wildlife include a host of high-profile species, such as grizzly bears, wolverines, wolves, Dall sheep and caribou that are at risk elsewhere.

  • The watershed provides essential winter range to the Porcupine Caribou Herd–the same animals that spend their summer raising calves in Alaska's Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
    View the Porcupine Caribou Herd Range and Concentration of Locations
  • It's also home to the Yukon's largest herd of woodland caribou–along with several other notable populations of woodland caribou, a species in decline elsewhere.
  • Extensive wetlands are significant as migratory waterfowl nesting and staging areas, along with necessary habitat for peregrine falcons and other birds of prey and a host of nesting shorebirds and neotropical songbirds.
  • Portions of the Peel Watershed remained ice-free through the Pleistocene Ice Age, a factor contributing to the remarkable plant and animal communities found there today. As the earth faces a new phase of climate change, the Peel Watershed could again become what scientists call a "refugia"–a large, connected and naturally functioning ecosystem providing survivable conditions for species likely to become imperiled elsewhere.

Establishment of a National Park will help preserve this crucial area for generation to come.

 (courtesy of Protect the Peel)

The Decision Makers

Stephen Harper
Member of Parliament Calgary Southwest
Stephen Harper
Leader, Conservative Party of Canada / Chef, Parti Conservateur du Canada
Stephen Harper
Stephen Harper
Prime Minsiter of Canada
Darrell Pasloski
Darrell Pasloski
Premier of Yukon

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