Wildlife Advisory Committee
The Sydenham
Sportsmen's Association Wildlife Advisory Committee has two principal objectives.
One is to engage in projects that directly conserve, protect and enhance
area wildlife populations. The other is to promote and protect the opportunities
for people to enjoy that wildlife.
The
SSA holds that proper wildlife habitat is essential to the very existence
of wildlife. Remedies are sought and promoted for wildlife habitat that
has effectively been rendered useless for wildlife reproduction through
human acts, land use and misuse. For example, bluebirds have been in great
decline, not only because of alteration of habitat, but also because of
competition for nest sites with the introduced European starling. Wildlife
Committee member Lorne Smith has spearheaded a club effort that is responsible
for the construction, erection, inspection and maintenance of more that
6,000 bluebird nesting boxes, installed from Manitoulin Island to Orangeville.
These efforts are paying very obvious dividends, as more and more families
of this nearly extinct songbird are now being produced, and grace our area
fields. Club members have also participated in the erection of wood duck
houses, three different kinds of mallard nests, kestrel houses, chickadee
and wren houses. The club is even helping to reverse deteriorating bat
populations through the erection of bat boxes... mosquitoes, watch out!
Club
projects are done on SSA lands, and through agreements with landowners
and government agencies. Projects vary. For example, many species of wildlife
utilize apples, but may apple trees are being out-competed and shaded out
by over-topping nearby trees. SSA members have restored apple productivity
through release cuttings in spruce/pine plantations, and by pruning mature
apple trees. Lost and degraded wildlife habitat is being restored and enhanced
in many locations by SSA planting of trees and shrubs favorable to wildlife.
Club members, with OFAH and MNR funding, have begun to establish a demonstration
wildlife enhancement area on 8 acres of recently purchased land immediately
adjacent to the clubhouse property. In time, this property will be a valuable
educational model for those who wish to actually do something positive
about wildlife restoration in our great outdoors.
SSA
observers make inspections and observations in local deer yards. The data
derived permits recommendations to be made to the MNR, and provides the
basis for emergency feeding and trail tramping when winter severity stresses
go critical.
SSA
members participate in the planning, funding, live-trapping and release
of wild turkeys. The aim is to have true wild turkey strains regain their
place in the local wildlife system.Wildlife Committee members create walking
trails for general access to wildlife areas. Members review and comment
on local environmental issues.The Wildlife Committee participates in debates
with government and other agencies to counter destructive land use policies.
Also, the Committee has actively opposed government policies that would
erode or remove the public right to participate in hunting and fishing.
Some
of the specific wildlife-oriented projects include:
- Arran
Lake mallard nest structures.
- Isaac
Lake mallard nest structures.
- Plan
and direct establishment of demonstration wildlife management area.
- Long
Swamp deer yard enhancement.
- Derby
Tract apple tree release cutting.
- Wetland
Wood Duck box erection and maintenance.
- McNabb
Lake wetland "beaver baffler".
- Conservation
Authority forest access trails.
- Fencing
wildlife cover against cattle and ATVs.
As
well as specific wildlife projects such as the above, the Sydenham Sportsmen
participate in agreements for the conservation-oriented management of certain
lands.
The
Wildlife Committee looks to the future by involving junior members in as
many conservation projects as possible. We try to instill in our young
people a solid respect for the natural world and our place in it.
The
foregoing is only a partial list of the interests and activities of the
Sydenham Sportsmen's Wildlife Committee. Suffice it to say that many thousand
of volunteer man hours have been and will continue to be expended in our
quest to protect and enhance our natural world.
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