Peary caribou and barren-ground caribou COSEWIC assessment and status report: chapter 14

Technical Summary: Rangifer Tarandus Pearyi

Rangifer tarandus pearyi

Peary caribou – Caribou de peary – Tuktu

Range of Occurrence in Canada:

Northwest Territories and Nunavut

Extent and Area Information

Extent of occurrence (EO) (km²)

602 356 km². Based on surveys and monitoring of radiocollared animals

Specify trend in EO

stable

Are there extreme fluctuations in EO?

No

Area of occupancy (AO) (km²)

Cannot be properly estimated because it may vary over time and there is insufficient information

Specify trend in AO

stable

Are there extreme fluctuations in AO?

No

Number of known or inferred current locations

Four metapopulations

Specify trend in #

Stable

Are there extreme fluctuations in number of locations?

No

Specify trend in area, extent or quality of habitat

Stable

Population Information

Generation time (average age of parents in the population)

7 years

Number of mature individuals

7890  (5971 to 9146)

Total population trend:

Decreasing

% decline over the last/next 10 years or 3 generations.

72%

Are there extreme fluctuations in number of mature individuals?

Yes in some populations

Is the total population severely fragmented?

No

Specify trend in number of populations

Stable

Are there extreme fluctuations in number of populations?

No

List populations with number of mature individuals in each:

  • Queen Elizabeth Islands: 2100
  • Banks Island-Northwest Victoria Island: 1500
  • Prince of Wales – Somerset: 60
  • Boothia Peninsula: 3350

Threats (actual or imminent threats to populations or habitats)

Winter die-offs due to extreme icing events. Climate warming. Potential threats: hunting if unregulated, industrial activity, increased predation if wolf numbers respond to increased muskox numbers, loss of genetic diversity in a few extremely reduced populations.

Rescue Effect (immigration from an outside source) 

None

Status of outside population(s)?

Canadian endemic

Is immigration known or possible?

No

Would immigrants be adapted to survive in Canada?

Is there sufficient habitat for immigrants in Canada?

Yes

Is rescue from outside populations likely?

No

Quantitative Analysis

not done

Other Status

COSEWIC: 3 units recognized in 1991: ‘Banks Island’ and ‘High Arctic’ Endangered,  ‘Low Arctic” Threatened

IUCN: Endangered (1996)

Status and Reasons for Designation

Status: Endangered

Alpha-numeric code: A2a

Reasons for Designation: This caribou is a Canadian endemic subspecies.  Numbers have declined by about 72% over the last three generations, mostly because of catastrophic die-off likely related to severe icing episodes.  The ice covers the vegetation and caribou starve. Voluntary restrictions on hunting by local people are in place, but have not stopped population declines.  Because of the continuing decline and expected changes in long-term weather patterns, this subspecies is at imminent risk of extinction.

Applicability of Criteria

Criterion A (Declining Total Population): Endangered because it has declined by more than 50% in 3 generation, based on the population surveys.  Decline is expected to continue because of changing climate. (A2a)

Criterion B (Small Distribution, and Decline or Fluctuation): the extent of occurrence is much greater than 20,000 km²

Criterion C (Small Total Population Size and Decline): Threatened, because there are fewer than 10,000 mature individuals and decline has been much more than 10% over the last 3 generation.  (C1)

Criterion D (Very Small Population or Restricted Distribution): there are more than 1000 mature individuals remaining.

Criterion E (Quantitative Analysis): analysis has not been done.

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