B.C. First Nation tracking deer stress levels by studying their poop

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Kamloops-area Skeetchestn gathering health information in wake of environmental challenges

Gabe Jules is pulling back on his deer hunts. He has witnessed a drop in both the numbers and health of the deer population in his territory, which has been ravaged by two devastating wildfire seasons in three years.

Those impacts of the fire seasons have prompted Skeetchestn First Nation to lead a study of the local deer population to test and monitor their stress levels. The research found that in August 2021, the peak of cortisol in deer fecal samples had an average of about 120 nanograms. In comparison, deer in August 2022 had around 50 to 56 nanograms of cortisol.

It’s a model that resonates with Dickson-Hoyle, a University of British Columbia fire ecologist and partner of the Secwepemcul̓ecw Restoration Stewardship Society, a Secwepemc-led organization seeking to advance sustainable land management within Secwepemcul’ecw, Secwepemc ancestral territory.Dickson-Hoyle has helped identify plants post-wildfires, as well as DNA analysis of what the deer are consuming following different wildfire seasons.

 

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