MEDIA
RELEASE—For Immediate Release—August
6 , 2008
Clams dead in secluded lake near logging operations in Whiteshell
Provincial Park
Winnipeg, Manitoba—The
Wilderness Committee is investigating a mass die-off
of freshwater clams near a logging operation in
Whiteshell Provincial Park. Meditation Lake is only
accessible by hiking, and appears to have suffered
a large toxic algae bloom in July, which may have
killed off many of the freshwater clams.
The forest near Meditation Lake
has been extensively logged in the last few months,
following a windstorm blow-down in 2007. The Manitoba
government claims the logging is needed to reduce
the risk of forest fires.
A theory about the algae is that
the nutrients in the lake increased due to logging
operations nearby, and this caused the formation
of a large and deadly bloom. Recent water studies
in eastern Manitoba showed logging operations increase
the amount of phosphorus in nearby waterways. It
is understood that excess phosphorus is a main cause
of algae blooms.
"What we know right now is that
this lake is in trouble," said Eric Reder, Campaign
Director for the Wilderness Committee. "We don't
have an exact cause for this problem. We know there
shouldn't be commercial logging in our parks. We
know that the government's excuse of fire suppression
is wrong. And now we have a species die-off that
the professors I've spoken to say is extremely rare,
if not unique. We need to do a better job of protecting
our wilderness."
Contradicting the Manitoba government's
stance on logging and fires, the government of Ontario
released a 160-page report in 2006, explaining that
fire suppression in parks was a failed experiment,
and often caused more intense fires in the future.
The Wilderness Committee has sent
in water samples for analysis.
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