Provincial and Federal Governments Announce New Priority Place for Species at Risk

  • Fisheries, Forestry and Agriculture

July 8, 2024

Today, the Honourable Elvis Loveless, Minister of Fisheries, Forestry and Agriculture, and the Federal Minister of Environment and Climate Change, the Honourable Steven Guilbeault, announced the creation of a new Priority Place for Species at Risk: the Limestone Landscapes of the Great Northern Peninsula Priority Place in Newfoundland and Labrador.

Priority Places are areas of high biodiversity value that are seen as a distinct place with a common ecological theme by the people who live and work there. These places have significant biodiversity, concentrations of species at risk, and opportunities to advance conservation efforts. Focusing on these areas allows us to conserve and restore habitat that benefits many species at once.

This is the 12th Priority Place to be identified in Canada and the first one in the Province of Newfoundland and Labrador. The new Priority Place encompasses unique ecosystems on the Great Northern Peninsula of the Island of Newfoundland, such as limestone barrens and outcrops, limestone coasts and islands, and limestone highlands, forests and wetlands that support high biodiversity. This area provides habitat for approximately 40 federally and provincially listed species at risk. It is also an important stopover site for many at risk migratory birds.

Priority Places are collaborative initiatives. The Federal and Provincial Governments are working with Indigenous Governments and Organizations, environmental non-governmental organizations, and other partners to support and fund on-the-ground recovery actions, capacity building, and adaptive management within the Limestone Landscapes of the Great Northern Peninsula Priority Place. More information is available in the backgrounder below.

Quotes
“Limestone barrens are a unique habitat that support many highly specialized and rare plant species that live nowhere else in the world. The Limestone Landscapes of the Great Northern Peninsula Priority Place will build on the important work set out in the provincial Limestone Barrens Species at Risk Recovery Plan, which maps the road to recovery for several at-risk species and the conservation of many more rare species. Thank you to our federal counterparts for sharing our vision for this very special place.”
Honourable Elvis Loveless
Minister of Fisheries, Forestry and Agriculture

“Collaboration is key to protecting biodiversity and species at risk. Priority Places for Species at Risk allow us to work with provincial and territorial governments, Indigenous Peoples, and other Canadians to protect important habitat and unique ecosystems such as the limestone barrens found on the Great Northern Peninsula of Newfoundland and Labrador. Together, we can implement effective conservation projects that help halt and reverse biodiversity loss.”
Honourable Steven Guilbeault
Minister of Environment and Climate Change

-30-

Learn more
Priority Places for Species at Risk

Overview of the Pan-Canadian approach to transforming species at risk conservation in Canada

Follow us on X @GovNL and @FFA_GovNL

Like us on Facebook

BACKGROUNDER

  • Priority Places for Species at Risk are identified under the Pan-Canadian Approach to Transforming Species at Risk Conservation in Canada. This approach shifts from a single-species approach to conservation to one that focuses on multiple species and ecosystems.
  • Funding for Priority Places for Species at Risk was first established under the Nature Legacy’s Canada Nature Fund in 2018 and expanded under Enhanced Nature Legacy in 2021.
  • The 11 previously identified Priority Places for Species at Risk cover nearly 30 million hectares, including 2 million hectares of critical habitat for species at risk. More than 300 species at risk can be found in these places, many of which have more than half of their range in a priority place.
  • The Government of Canada is providing $2,294,978 over three fiscal years to Limestone Landscapes of the Great Northern Peninsula Priority Place partners. The Government of Newfoundland and Labrador is contributing $1,256,550 to this initiative.
  • Identifying the limestone landscapes as Newfoundland and Labrador’s priority place will build on goals and strategies outlined in the provincial Limestone Barrens Species at Risk Recovery Plan, released in July 2022.
  • The province’s Limestone Barrens Species at Risk Recovery Plan includes recovery measures for 10 plant species designated and listed under the Endangered Species Act and identifies critical habitat for seven species.
  • In addition to the Government of Canada and the Government of Newfoundland and Labrador, the many partners involved in the new Priority Place include Miawpukek First Nation, Qalipu First Nation, Intervale Associates Inc., Limestone Barrens Species at Risk Recovery Team, Wilder Institute, Nature Conservancy of Canada, Memorial University, Stewardship Association of Municipalities, Birds Canada, and The Rooms.
2024 07 08 11:15 am