| Draft
Revision
CANADIAN ROCKY MOUNTAIN PARKS - ALBERTA AND BRITISH
COLUMBIA
The contiguous national parks of Banff, Jasper, Kootenay and Yoho, with
the adjoining Mount Robson, Hamber and Mount Assiniboine provincial parks,
bestride the continental divide of the central Rocky Mountains at their
highest point. They protect 400 kilometers of forested mountain landscape
studded with dramatic peaks, glaciers, lakes, cascades, canyons and limestone
caves,. The Burgess Shale fossil site, inscribed as a World Heritage site
in 1980 and famous for its fossil remains of soft-bodied marine animals,
is in Yoho National Park.
COUNTRY Canada - Alberta
and British Columbia
NAME Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks
IUCN MANAGEMENT CATEGORY
Jasper National Park II National Park
Banff National Park II National Park
Kootenay National Park II National Park
Yoho National Park II National Park
Mount Robson Provincial Park II National Park
Hamber Provincial Park II National Park
Mount Assiniboine Provincial Park I National Park
National Parks World Heritage sites inscribed in 1984. Natural Criteria
i, ii, iii
B.C.Provincial Parks added to the inscribed sites in 1990.
BIOGEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION Rocky Mountains (1.19.12)
GEOGRAPHICAL LOCATION The parks are a 400km
long continuous belt of protected areas bestriding the central Rocky Mountains
at their highest, along the British Columbia-Alberta border. They are
from north to south: Jasper and Banff National Parks in Alberta, and Yoho
and Kootenay National Parks in British Columbia which adjoin the provincial
parks which are all in B.C.: Mount Robson Park and further south, Hamber
Park lie west of Jasper National Park; Mount Assiniboine Park is between
Banff and Kootenay Parks. The parks lie 100km west of the city of Calgary,
Alberta, easily accessible by main highways and railroads. 50°34'-53°28'N,
115°10'-119°32'W
DATE AND HISTORY OF ESTABLISHMENT
| 1885: |
2600ha
around the Cave and Basin mineral hot springs in Banff declared a
park reserve; |
| 1886: |
2600
ha beside Mt Stephen set aside as Yoho Dominion Park; the area fluctuated
till 1930; |
| 1887: |
The
Banff area formally gazetted as Rocky Mountains Park (67,300ha) under
the Rocky Mountains Park Act; it was renamed and extended in 1930; |
| 1907: |
Jasper
Forest Park created (1,295,000ha); its area also fluctuated until
1930; |
| 1913: |
Mount
Robson Provincial Park gazetted: 218,795ha, extended in 1967 by 739ha; |
| 1920: |
Kootenay
Park gazetted (land relinquished by the state in exchange for Federal
Government grant to complete Highway 93, the parks’ main road):
152,000ha in 1930, since reduced; |
| 1922: |
Mount
Assiniboine: 5200ha protected; |
| 1930: |
The
Rocky Mountains Park renamed Banff National Park and extended to 669,500ha
(5,400ha excised in 1949); Jasper and Yoho Park areas also finally
determined; |
| 1941: |
Hamber
declared a Provincial Park (1,009,112ha) but reduced to present size
in 1961/62; |
| 1973: |
Mount
Assiniboine Provincial Park extended to protect the watershed, alpine
areas, and to link the park to Banff and Kootenay National Parks; |
| 1980: |
The
Burgess shale fossil site in Yoho Park made a World Heritage site. |
AREA The total area of the World Heritage Site
is 2,312,216ha and includes:
Jasper National Park 1,087,800ha
Banff National Park 664,080ha
Kootenay National Park 140,600ha
Yoho National Park 131,300ha
Mount Robson Provincial Park 224,866ha
Mount Assiniboine Provincial Park 39,052ha
Hamber Provincial Park 24,518ha
Contiguous local and provincial parks in Alberta, from north to south:
Willmore Wilderness Park 459,671ha Ghost River Wilderness Area 15,317ha
White Goat Wilderness Area 44,457ha Kananaskis Provincial Park 50,308ha
Siffleur Wilderness Area 41,215ha
LAND TENURE The National Parks occupy federal
land. The Provincial Parks occupy British Columbian provincial crown land.
ALTITUDE From 1036m to 3954m (Mount Robson).
PHYSICAL FEATURES The central Canadian Rocky
Mountains are a high massif of sedimentary rock dating from the Precambrian
to Cretaceous periods, oriented northwest-southeast along the Continental
Divide. They consist of the Western Ranges, the Main Ranges, the Front
Ranges and the eastern Foothills. The Western Ranges in the provincial
parks, the southern part of Kootenay and western part of Yoho include
formations of folded thick shales. The Main Ranges form the Continental
Divide and are present in all the parks. They are formed of limestone,
dolomite, sandstone and shale and include nearly all the highest mountains
including Mounts Robson, Columbia, Forbes, Alberta and Assiniboine which
all exceed 3600m. In the Main Ranges of Yoho Park fossil beds in the Burgess
Shale layer of the Stephen Formation occur which are of special interest
as they show evolution in action during the mid-Cambrian period. The Front
Ranges in Banff and Jasper Parks are composed of thick layers of limestone
and shale. These mountain ranges often have a tilted, tooth-like appearance:
Mt. Rundle in Banff and Roche Miette in Jasper Parks are characteristic.
The Foothills make up the easternmost extensions of the Rockies and only
occur in a small southeastern portion of Jasper Park.
Active glaciers and icefields still exist throughout the region, particularly
in the Main Ranges. The Columbia Icefield is the largest in North America's
subarctic interior. Covering 325 sq. km, it spans the Continental Divide
and the boundary between Jasper and Banff Parks and is regarded as the
hydrographic apex of North America. The parks contain the headwaters to
four major river systems: the North Saskatchewan and Athabasca Rivers
which flow northeast and the Columbia and Fraser Rivers which flow southwest.
The park waters of Yoho and Kootenay flow to the Pacific Ocean through
the Columbia drainage, those of Mount Robson, via the headwaters of the
Fraser River. Hamber Park contains Fortress Lake watershed. There are
numerous lakes in Mount Assiniboine Park, most of which are located in
broad alpine valleys and plateaus in glacially scoured depressions in
the limestone bedrock.
The soils are generally shallow and immature, but marked variations do
occur. In Jasper, chernozems are found on steep subalpine grassland slopes,
whilst podzols are found in upland areas and gleys in poorly drained areas.
At Lake Louise in Banff, the soils consist of moraine material.
CLIMATE The Parks experience continental cool
summer to subarctic conditions, where temperatures can range from 30°C
in the summer to -30°C in the winter. In the valleys, mean annual maximum
and minimum temperatures are 8.6°C and -3.3°C respectively, while at higher
altitudes temperatures are generally five to seven degrees cooler. Annual
rainfall is 250mm. Annual snowfall at lower elevations is 160mm; at higher
elevations and along the continental divide, it is 650mm (Parks Canada,
2002a).
VEGETATION The Rockies can be divided into three
ecosystems: alpine meadow, sub-alpine grassland with non-vegetated surfaces,
and wetlands. Floral species counts in Banff and Jasper Parks indicate
about 996 vascular plants, 243 mosses, 407 lichens and 53 liverworts.
Montane vegetation extends over some 18,432ha and occurs in major valley
bottoms, on the foothills and sun-exposed slopes of lower mountainsides,
especially in the front ranges. Forest cover, generally found between
1200m and 1800m, ranges from 50.09% in Banff Park and 58.21% in Yoho to
77.07% in Kootenay. The first two have less cover because they are located
on the drier Front range (Parks Canada, 2002). Typical species include
Douglas fir Pseudotsuga menziesii, white spruce, Picea glauca,
aspen Populus tremuloides and poplar Populus balsamifera.
Montane wetlands and meadows occupy areas next to major rivers such as
the Bow and Red Deer valleys in Banff and Athabasca and Brazeau River
valleys in Jasper. Typical species include lodgepole pine Pinus contorta,
which rapidly colonises after fire, and aspen; black spruce Picea
mariana is occasionally found along these river valleys.
The subalpine ecosystem occupies mountainsides between 1800m and 2100m,
and valley bottoms at high elevation. This is the most extensive ecoregion
in the Rockies and can be subdivided into lower and upper subalpine occupying
69,120ha and 46,080ha, respectively. The principal forest community of
the lower subalpine zone comprises Engelmann spruce Picea engelmannii,
limber pine Pinus flexilis and lodgepole pine P.contorta. Subalpine
fir Abies lasiocarpa dominates the upper subalpine zone, although
it thins towards the treeline. South of Bow Pass, pure stands of Lyall's
larch Larix lyalli dominate the upper limit of this ecoregion.
The alpine ecosystem occurs above the treeline and covers an area of about
13,824ha. It is characterised by diminutive hardy vegetation such as low-growing
willow Salix arctica and dwarf birch Betula glandulosa, heath
Cassiope tetragona, mountain avens Dryas integrifolia, D. hookeriania,
sedge Carex nigricans, Kobresia bellardii, Phyllodoce glandulifolia
and Antennaria lanata. Around Emerald Lake in Yoho, pockets
of wetbelt forest typical of the Pacific Coast region can be found. Species
include western red cedar Thule plicata, western hemlock Tsuga
heterophylla and western yew Taxus brevifolia, all at the extreme
easternmost extent of their range. Vascular plants found in Mt. Assiniboine
park include American alpine smelowskia Smelowskia calycina, Raynold's
sedge Carex raynoldsii, Cusick's Indian paintbrush Castilleja
cusickii, stalked-pod locoweed Oxytropis podocarpa, sub-alpine
grassland Saussurea nuda and apetalous campion Silene uralensis
attenuata. Those found within Mt. Robson park include low sandwort
Atenaria longipedinculata, slender Indian paintbrush Castilleja
gracillima, western Indian paintbrush C. occidentalis, sulphur
indian paintbrush C. sulphurea and arctic cinquefoil Potentilla
hyparctica.
FAUNA 56 mammalian species are recorded. Characteristic
species found in alpine meadows include Rocky mountain goat Oreamos
americanus, bighorn sheep Ovis canadensis, northern pika
Ochotona princeps and hoary marmot Marmota caligata. Forest
mammals include moose Alces alces, mule deer Odocoileus hemionus,
white-tailed deer O. viriginianus, caribou Rangifer tarandus,
red deer Cervus canadensis and red squirrel Tamiasciurus
hudsonicus. Carnivores include grey wolf Canis lupus, grizzly
bear Ursos arctos horribilis, black bear U. americanus, wolverine
Gulo gulo luscus (VU), lynx Felis lynx canadensis and puma
F. concolor.
Some 280 avifaunal species have been seen, including northern three-toed
woodpecker Picoides tridactylus, white-tailed ptarmigan Lagopus
leucurus, grey jay Perisoreus canadensis, mountain bluebird
Sialia currucoides, Clark's nutcraker Nucifraga columbiana, golden
eagle Aquila chrysaetos, mountain chickadee Parus gambeli and
rock pipit Anthus spinoletta). Other fauna recorded includes one
species of toad, three species of frog, one species of salamander and
two species of snake. The tiny Banff Springs snail Physella johnsoni,
discovered in 1926, is listed as endangered by the Committee on the Status
of Endangered Wildlife in Canada. It only inhabits five warm mineral springs
on Sulphur Mountain in Banff National Park (Parks Canada, 2002a).
CULTURAL HERITAGE Since prehistoric times, the
Kootenay valley has served as a major north-south travel route. The Kootenai
Indians settled in the region about 11,000 to 12,000 years ago. Pictographs
found near the hot springs indicate this was a meeting place for plain
and mountain bands. Banff's Vermillion Lakes is one of Canada's oldest
known archeological sites, at 10,500 B.P, and some pre-historic artifacts
in Jasper have been dated to 9,000 B.P. European fur traders and explorers
first reached the area in the 1800's seeking transportation routes through
the high mountian passes. They were followed by homesteaders and entrepeneurs
who realised the commercial potential of developing areas such as Radium
Hot Springs.
LOCAL HUMAN POPULATION According to the 2001
census, the population of Banff was 7,716, of Jasper, 4,700, of Lake Louise,
1,500 and of Field approximately 300, largely dependent on tourism, logging
and maintenance of the parks (Parks Canada 2002a).
VISITORS AND VISITOR FACILITIES Between eight
and ten million people annually visit the World Heritage site. Facilities
include picnic sites, downhill ski-areas, souvenir shops, restaurants
and service stations There is a wide range of accommodations including
over 30 campgrounds, 12 hostels and 25 outlying commercial accommodation
facilities. Year-round visitor centres and hotels are located in Banff,
Lake Louise, Jasper and Field. Seasonal visitor centres are located at
the Columbia Icefield and in Radium Hot Springs near the west entrance
to Kootenay National Park. Mount Robson Provincial Park visitor centre
is located at the west entrance to the park (Parks Canada 2002a).
SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH AND FACILITIES Research
is carried out in the following topics: fire ecology, grizzly bear, lynx,
cougars, wolverines, the biology and ecology of ungulates, aquatic ecosystems,
small mammals, birds, amphibians, forest fragmentation, ecological land
classification, tourism and recreation, and fossil research.
CONSERVATION VALUE The area has outstanding
natural beauty, floral and faunal diversity, and is a prime example of
ongoing geological processes such as glaciation and canyon formation.
The Rocky Mountains are also regionally important to ensure the protection
of heritage resources and large tracts of wilderness.
CONSERVATION MANAGEMENT Banff, Jasper, Kootenay
and Yoho National Parks are administered by the Canadian government under
the National Parks Act. This Act was amended in 2000 to make ecological
integrity its first priority. Boundaries for communities in National Parks
were set and development was capped (Government of Canada, 2000). Community
plans for Jasper, Lake Louise and Field were completed in 2000 (Parks
Canada, 2002a).
The Parks Canada Agency which is responsible for the management of all
Canada's national parks and national historic sites, operates within the
Department of Canadian Heritage. The Agency participates in cooperative
programs with other federal and provincial agencies. Such programs include
pine beetle control, wildlife monitoring, fire management and search and
rescue. In 1996 the minister responsible for Parks Canada commissioned
a study of the Banff-Bow valley to ascertain the state of the environment
in the core of Banff National Park. In 1999 the minister commissioned
a second study, on the ecological integrity of Canada's national parks.
Reports produced as a result of these studies provide direction for management
plans and strategies.
Management plans for Banff, Jasper, Kootenay and Yoho National Parks were
completed between 1997 and 2000. For management purposes the national
parks are divided into five zones. Zone I, Special Preservation Areas
where access and use are strictly controlled, cover 3% of the land. Zone
II, Wilderness, where only activities requiring primitive facilities are
permitted, covers 94% of the land. Zone III, Natural Environment, where
low-density outdoor recreation is permitted, occupies 3%. Zone IV, Outdoor
Recreation, provides for higher intensity recreation with supporting infrastructure
such as downhill ski-areas. Zone V, Park Services: the service centres,
towns and major infrastructure such as highways and railroads (Parks Canada,
2002a).
Mount Robson, Hamber and Mount Assiniboine Provincial Parks are administered
by the government of British Columbia according to the provisions of the
Parks Act. BC Parks, within the provincial Ministry of Water, Lands and
Air Protection, prepares management plans, sets out objectives and actions
for the conservation, development, interpretation and operation of provincial
protected areas for ten to twenty year periods. Its management plans,
based on current information about natural and cultural values, recreation
opportunities and resource activities in surrounding lands, divide the
provincial parks into four zones: wilderness conservation, natural environment,
wilderness recreation and intensive recreation. For Mount Robson Provincial
Park these zones are: wilderness conservation 58%, wilderness recreation
22%, natural environment 16% and intensive recreation 3% (Parks Canada,
2002a).
MANAGEMENT CONSTRAINTS Much of the land bordering
British Columbia and Alberta is designated for multiple resource use which
includes logging, oil and gas extraction and recreation. The roads serving
these activities are have increased public access to formerly remote areas.
This is particularly evident at Ensign Creek, Yoho where logging has brought
access roads very close to Amiskwi Wilderness Area which is adjacent to
the park boundary (Canadian Parks Service, 1988d). Within Jasper, the
construction of Highway 16, the Canadian National Railway and the Trans-Mountain
Pipeline have had a profound hydrological effect on the lower Athabasca
and Miette River valleys. The aesthetic impact of the Yellowhead River
corridor and wildlife mortality are also a problem: about 1000 animals
were killed between 1970 and 1980 (Parks Canada, 2000c).
One of the biggest threats facing the parks is that of the development
encouraged by increased tourism. The townsite region of Jasper is an ecologically
important area located at the junction of three watersheds. During the
winter, wildlife concentrates in the area but development has led to a
disturbance in ungulate migration routes around the town, the destruction
of key habitats as well conflicts between bears and humans (Parks Canada,
2000c). Regular proposals for expansion of the four downhill ski resorts
in the parks are made and continue to cause controversy.
STAFF Banff: 225 full-time employees; Jasper:
200; Lake Louise, in Banff National Park: 200. Kootenay and Yoho Parks
are managed as one field unit with Lake Louise.
BUDGET Banff: C$9,12,000,000; Jasper: C$11,000,000;
Kootenay, Yoho and Lake Louise, C$10,500,000. The three provincial parks
are budgeted regionally, not by separate parks (Parks Canada, 2002).
LOCAL ADDRESSES
Parks Canada, Department of Canadian Heritage, 25 Eddy
Street, Hull, Quebec, K1A 0M5.
Superintendent, Banff National Park, Box 900, Banff, Alberta T1L 1K2 Tel:
(403) 762-1500.
Superintendent, Jasper National Park, P.O. Box 10, Jasper, Alberta T0E
1E0 Tel: (403) 852-6161.
Superintendent, Kootenay National Park, Box 220, Radium Hot Springs, B.C.V0A
1M0 Tel: (250) 347-9615.
Superintendent, Yoho National Park, Box 99, Field, B. C. V0A 1G0 Tel:
(250) 343-6100.
Mount Robson and Hamber Provincial Parks, P.O. Box 579, Valemount, B.C.
V0E 2Z0 Tel: (250) 566-4325.
Mount Assiniboine Provincial Park, P.O. Box 118, Wasa, B.C. V0B 2K0 Tel:
(250) 228-4200.
REFERENCES
Banff-Bow Valley Task Force (Page,R.,Bayley,S.,Cook,J.,Green,J. &
Ritchie,J.) (1996). Banff-Bow Valley: At the Crossroads. Summary report
of the Banff-Bow Valley Study. Prepared for the Minister of Canadian
Heritage, Ottawa, ON. 76pp.
BC Parks (2002). wlapwww.gov.bc.ca/bcparks.
BC Parks Division (1987). Hamber Provincial Park Master Plan.
British Columbia Ministry of
Environment, Land and Parks.
BC Parks Division (1989). Mount Assiniboine Provincial Park
Master Plan. British Columbia
Ministry of Environment, Land and Parks.
BC Parks Division (1992). Mount Robson Provincial Park Master
Plan. British Columbia
Ministry of Environment, Land and Parks.
Gadd, B. (1986). Handbook of the Canadian Rockies. Corax Press,
Jasper, Alberta.
Government of Canada (2000). The Canada National Parks Act, Ottawa,
Queen's Printer.
Natural Resources Canada. 1:50,000 topographic maps, all areas.
Parks Canada Agency (2000a). Response to July 22,2002 Request
for Information Update on Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage
Site. Banff, Alberta.
Parks Canada Agency (2000b). Unimpaired for Future Generations? Protecting
Ecological Integrity with Canada's National Parks Vol.1 Call to
Action. Vol.2 Setting a New Direction for Canada's National Parks.
Report on the Ecological Integrity of Canada's National Parks. Ottawa,
Ontario.
Parks Canada www.parkscanada.gc.ca.
Parks Canada (1997) Banff National Park Management Plan. Canadian
Heritage
Parks Canada Agency (2000c). Jasper National Park Management Plan.
Minister of Supply & Services Canada.
Parks Canada Agency (2000d). Kootenay National Park Management Plan.
Minister of Supply & Services Canada.
Parks Canada Agency (2000e). Yoho National Park Management Plan.
Minister of Supply & Services Canada.
Statistics Canada (2002). www.statcan.ca.
DIGITAL MAPS:
All National Parks:
a) National Topographical Data Base - digital copy of 1:50,000 hardcopy
maps.
b) Ecological Land Classification (vector format):
- Ecoregion - Vegetation communites - Slope - Moisture - Dominant
Vegetation - Landform.
c) Forest Stand Origin (raster format) - Year of forest origin.
d) Lakes - Rivers - Trails - Roads - Railroad - Burned areas
(natural & prescribed) - Wetlands.
e) Digital elevation model with slope & aspect.
f) Facilities, backcountry & frontcountry.
Banff, Kootenay & Yoho National Parks:
a) Greenness models (NDVI & Tasselled Cap).
b) Insolation model by month (heating values watts/sq.meters).
c) Fire severity maps (from landsat TM).
d) Vegetation model (from landsat TM).
e) Hydrology model (with watershed basins).
Satellite Images:
a) Indian Resource Satellite Images Aug.1988:
- 5 meter resolution panchromatic.
- error <10meters.
b) Landsat 5 &7 TM All bands:
- Landsat 5 43/24 Sept.25 1987
- Landsat 5 44/24 Sept.2 1988
- Landsat 5 43/25 Sept.11 1988
- Landsat 5 43/24 Sept.20 1987
- Landsat 5 43/24 Sept.7 1988
- Landsat 5 43/24 Oct.6 2000
- Landsat 5 43/24 June 22 2002
DATE November 1994. Updated 10/1995, 7/1997,
12/1998, December 2002. |