Time of day is not important, but rather total time spent in
killer whale habitat.
This private region is now set aside by the Canadian government to protect this unique
Killer Whale habitat.
During the late 1970s a local logging company was looking to develop this critical habitat into a dry land sort which would bare great impact on this Northern Resident
Killer Whale habitat.
Our route traverses the ultimate
killer whale habitat on both days of the two - day kayak tour.
Robson Bight is a small bay at the west end of JohnstoneStrait that is home to a protected
killer whale habitat famous for its whale - rubbing beaches.
Not exact matches
Matkin said he also worries that blaming
killer whales for recent sharp declines in marine mammals will give politicians and bureaucrats an excuse not to protect coastal water quality and
habitat.
Please note: if seeing
killer whales is your main goal, we recommend the afternoon / one day tour shown above as this tour spends double the time in their
habitat.
The nutrient rich waters in which we operate are near core
habitat for Humpback
Whales, Northern Resident
Killer Whales / Orca, Steller Sea Lions, Dall's Porpoise and more.
Kayak with
Killer Whales, watch Grizzly bears in their natural
habitat, explore ancient First Nation's territory on Canada's West Coast Wildlife Safari.
We know a lot of people come to our area and book tours with us because they want to see
Killer Whales / Orca in their natural
habitat.
Now can enjoy the
killer whales without harming their
habitat.
Now that we humans have destroyed the majority of salmon spawning
habitat, prey numbers are so low in some years that
killer whales have starved and been unable to give birth.
Ideally located near the south end of Discovery Passage, the area is critically important
habitat for
Killer Whales, Humpback
Whales, and so much more.
Raincoast Conservation Foundation and Living Oceans Society argued that the NEB and Cabinet failed to comply with the statutory requirements of the Species at Risk Act (SARA) with respect to the significant adverse effects of the Project on southern resident
killer whales and their critical
habitat.
If the Kinder Morgan pipeline were to go ahead without addressing impacts to marine species, including increased tanker noise, the Southern Resident
killer whale's population's survival and recovery would be jeopardized and their critical
habitat would be threatened.
Kinder Morgan's proposal to twin its existing Trans Mountain Pipeline would increase the amount of oil transported from Edmonton to Burnaby's Westbridge Terminal from 300,000 barrels per day to 890,000 barrels per day, and increase tanker traffic through part of the Southern Resident
killer whales» critical
habitat in the Salish Sea by nearly seven times, from 60 tankers per year to over 420.