- Видео 57
- Просмотров 95 428
Freshwater Conservation Canada
Канада
Добавлен 2 мар 2009
Freshwater Conservation Canada is a registered Canadian not for profit organization. Our mission is to conserve, protect and restore Canada’s freshwater ecosystems and their coldwater resources for current and future generations. All of the work Trout Unlimited Canada does is directed toward achieving this mission. Our work is guided by science and research and fueled by the unending passion of our volunteers and professional staff.
Our work includes stream restoration, scientific research and education. We have a small core group of highly trained staff and a network of volunteers across Canada operating through Freshwater Conservation Canada volunteer chapters, from PEI to Vancouver Island.
Our work includes stream restoration, scientific research and education. We have a small core group of highly trained staff and a network of volunteers across Canada operating through Freshwater Conservation Canada volunteer chapters, from PEI to Vancouver Island.
Видео
2024 Fish Rescue
Просмотров 3028 дней назад
When the headgates are shut, water is no longer being supplied to the canal, and water levels drop as the canal continues to drain. Seeps and precipitation will still provide the canal with water, though not enough to sustain those left stranded like you throughout the winter.
Cooling Streams Armstrong Creek
Просмотров 6328 дней назад
Freshwater Conservation Canada’s Cooling Streams program is focused on restoring riparian areas - the buffer of vegetation that connects land and water along streams, rivers, and lakes. By planting trees and shrubs along lakes, rivers, and streams we can help take carbon from the atmosphere. The trees and plants found within riparian zones are adapted to natural disturbances, such as spring flo...
Whispering Pines Project Extended Version
Просмотров 161Месяц назад
Hey! We’re Freshwater Conservation Canada, and we work to conserve, protect, and restore Canada's freshwater ecosystems. Our work is directed toward achieving this mission, guided by science and research, and fueled by the unwavering support of our community volunteers and professional staff. One project we’re very proud of is the restoration work we’ve been doing along a couple of tributaries ...
Beaver Dam Analogues at King Bolt Creek, May 2024
Просмотров 2326 месяцев назад
Check out this update on our Beaver Dam Analogues (BDAs) with our Implementation Biologist Elliot Lindsay at King Bolt Creek as part of our Cutthroat In Porcupine Hills Environmental Rehabilitation (CIPHER) Project. BDAs are built to mimic beaver dams, creating upstream pools to slow stream flow and increase available fish habitat while increasing water storage both at the surface and in ground...
Trout Unlimited Canada - Plains Midstream Volunteer Work Day, May 29th 2024
Просмотров 1477 месяцев назад
Volunteers from Plains Midstream donated 120 hours to construct seven beaver dam analogues (BDAs) on May 29th, at King Bolt Creek as part of our Cutthroat In Porcupine Hills Environmental Rehabilitation (CIPHER) Project. BDAs are built to mimic beaver dams, creating upstream pools to slow stream flow and increase available fish habitat while increasing water storage both at the surface and in g...
Fish Rescue Volunteer Video
Просмотров 72Год назад
Calling all fish enthusiasts, nature lovers, and adventure seekers! This event is your chance to make a difference and contribute to the conservation of Alberta's aquatic life. Dive into action as we rescue and relocate stranded fish to ensure their survival.
Virtual Field Trip-Assessing Stream Health
Просмотров 3132 года назад
Follow TUC’s Biologist, Kelly Mason, as she explores a local stream and reveals how biologists can tell if a stream is healthy or not. Keep in touch with Trout Unlimited Canada through our website, www.tucanada.org, and by joining our mailing list. Follow Trout Unlimited Canada Facebook: TroutUnlimitedCanada Instagram: tucanada Twitter: TUCanada1 Linked I...
Armstrong Creek Virtual Field Trip
Просмотров 4632 года назад
Join us for a virtual field trip focusing on a stream rehabilitation project in Ontario's Armstrong Creek, a tributary to the Rocky Saugeen River. This field trip also highlights the importance of coldwater streams and the species that rely on them. If you enjoyed this video and are interested in learning more about the work we do across Canada, please keep in touch with us through our website,...
A Day In The Life of A Native Fish
Просмотров 8552 года назад
In this video we explore what Alberta's native trout, char and whitefish experience in their daily lives, through video footage collected by river snorkeling, sometimes called "fishwatching".
How to Repair a Creek | Piper Creek Restoration Project
Просмотров 44 тыс.3 года назад
How to Repair a Creek | Piper Creek Restoration Project
The Million Mile Effort | Reconnecting Canada's Water
Просмотров 4,7 тыс.4 года назад
The Million Mile Effort | Reconnecting Canada's Water
Bio What? | Trout Unlimited Canada-Learn about Bio Engineering
Просмотров 4014 года назад
Bio What? | Trout Unlimited Canada-Learn about Bio Engineering
So What is a Storm Water Management Pond?
Просмотров 9824 года назад
So What is a Storm Water Management Pond?
Allison Creek Bioengineering Nov 2013
Просмотров 12911 лет назад
Allison Creek Bioengineering Nov 2013
Trout Unlimited Canada Snorkel Surveys - Nov 2013
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.11 лет назад
Trout Unlimited Canada Snorkel Surveys - Nov 2013
good work
My favorite buck for wildlife project is dog pound creek near Bottral Alberta .The restoration has been incredible.This has been the result of cooperative effort of land holders and wildlife groups
How much did that cost? Direct and indirect(permanent administrative state including pensions and healthcare) costs?
Interesting video, hope the project does well. Constant music backing was a bit distracting though.
Xlnt !
Wish I could do a project like that where I live
Far sighted farmer …
Bad farmer
RELEASE THE BEAVERS!!!!
LouiseAustralia 🦘
Many watershed restoration specialists. Universities are ready to consult for free on solving problems. But people stubbornly believe that a straight deep ditch overgrown with shrubs is a stream in nature.
who came here from school
Thank you Canada. You are a great neighbor! USA.
How can one get involved?
VERY GOOD question - Im guessing these folks are biology students as well as people already employed by conservation agencies and maybe charities
Pepper Pig
It’d be wicked cool to see what the creek looks like, 14 years later.
This is so beautiful this is my dream here in Sacramento
We love you Canadians ! 🇺🇸☮️🇨🇦 🐋
Great
Alluvial deposits due to seasonal gradients would demonstrate those tendencies which create a more dynamic response, onsite vegetation or prescribed Recovery efforts to mitigate and or propagate the diversities of instream scour, oxygen content, temperature range for Best Conditions for recoveries.
Maintenance regularly should be assessed, great Options, exist. High flows are someimes predictable so Review Options to respond to the freshwater inputs of any Rivers, streams, or other freshwater habitats including swamps or marshes to absorb seasonal flows, partake of yearly nutrient flows, productivity, response to Treatments as Natural biota of many Crustacean and Class Arthopoda can recover in numbers as nesting substrate, holding cover, feeding Options, as varied strategies of insect productivity utilize existing vegetation substrates continue through yearly temp, rainfall/snowload additions to the hydrological volumes able to activate bedloads functioning and sediment deposition over these Reaches.
listen folks there is very little visible flow you should really remove some of the vegetation and designate with stone and gravel and engineer the area so it flows relatively steady who knows 1000 GPH
Nutrient exchange over seasonal growing periods allows for localized Riparian Biota to integrate, absorption creates growth potential possibly expressed afterwards as Springs primary productivities revitalize now receding flooding to embrace Woody perennials growth, budding, leaf set, and seasonal use of nutrient fixation, absorption, growth of well established Vegetation giving rise to the positive benefits to the broader Ephinoptera, Plectoptera, or more broadly Class of Arthipoda that do fortify the web of Life including native trout species, crayfish or other Native Crustaceans that are so crucial to the food chain of the ecosystem's outputs.
These Genera of Insects use live, growing, flowering Species of Wetland assemblages to lay eggs in, land on, reproduce near, fulfilling pollination of plant Species such as Typhus, Sedges, Willows, Rushes, and alike Genera that are similar in habitat variables.
Realize nothing scours a great pool like the natural boulder, fallen log, upended root wad, above or below the surface, possibly both which are Realize nothing scours a great pool like the natural boulder, fallen log, upended root wad, or other cover that may within the channel that provide habitat forming pools, step pools, or graded rapids. Bedrock formations or other key topographic features that give escape cover, woody debris recruitment above and beneath the surface that integrates Insect life of the forms of Plectoptera, Ephinoptera, and other Genera of the rocky bottomed streams.
Could beavers help?
Introducing any beavers back in?
No, our restoration efforts were focused on the creek. In our experience, Mother Nature takes care of the rest. In this case, beavers have naturally returned to Piper Creek.
Rewind the world.
Waterway restoration always makes me so happy
What a great project.
So proud of Canada right now! Thank you for making this public!
What is the length of Piper Creek? Is the creek able to support Beavers?
Hi Laura, thanks for taking the time to comment. We did a quick check of Piper Creek's length using Google Earth and it appears to be just over 11 miles long. There are definitely beavers in the neighbourhood. One night during the project beavers dropped by and built a dam out of the willow stakes we were going to use to plant along the creek banks. Thanks,
Umm stop killing beavers and the creeks come back.
Beavers?
Amazing
👍🌿🌲🌱🍀☘🍁🍁🍁🦗🦂👍
was the farmer harmed in this restoration?
I too would like to know what happened with the farmer.
@@RazorBucks Any jokes or irony aside, the biggest harm to farmers come from the "ag industry" itself in the form of seed, fertilizer, and chemical prices, and non-repairable tractors. Being left at the whims of commodity buyers.
Bad news culverts. However. Some Bad News culverts protect relict native fish populations. Think brook and native Western trout. Cutthroat. So be careful. 🐋🐋🇺🇸
Exactly.
Great Thx ☃️
POCKET OF MONEY
Great footage, nicely narrated, thanks for sharing!
Log jams are in certain contexts critical for spawning habitat for fish! They provide cover and an area of slow moving water for fish to spawn.
Absolutely! We often look for ways to add wood back to channels to increase structure and complexity. Wood is good! But context is also key.
Señores es fundamental la REFORESTACIÓN de árboles NATIVOS para que vuelva el ciclo de vida sobretodo en la rivera de los ríos. Debe ser con diversidad y mucha responsabilidad. Prioridad para todos los países del mundo. Juntos podemos.
What a lovely video! I loved the bit where the education about the fish is documented. It's fantastic! thats how knowledge is passed down. Keep the good work.up!
I enjoyed every moment of this video. Thank you guys for this great work. Love and respect from an immigrant from war-torn Afghanistan.
nice work
Great work👍🏻
Good to see these lovely fish
I used to camp here. Wonderful area!