Restoration
Whitebark pine (Pinus albicaulis) was declared an endangered species in Canada in 2012. Both the tree itself and the ecosystems in which it grows are in serious decline and may not persist in the face of multiple stressors including diseases, insects, fires, fire suppression, and climate change.
In 2011, the BVRC began a collaborative project to restore whitebark pine ecosystems in west central British Columbia near the communities of Smithers and Houston. The program has now expanded across northern BC, with emphasis on the Skeena Region. We focus on areas recently disturbed by wildfires, mountain pine beetle, or salvage logging of beetle-killed lodgepole pine. Most restoration plantings are located in areas of high value grizzly and black bear habitat, where the seeds can form an important part of the bears’ diet.
We work with many community, industrial and governmental agency partners, and have support from a various funders as well as from the Office of the Wet’suwet’en within whose traditional territories this restoration program is taking place.
Learn more about the major components of our Whitebark Pine Restoration Program:
» Seed Collection
» Nursery Seedlings
» Restoration Plantings
» Restoration Treatments
» Community Involvement
Our restoration efforts focus on seed collection, restoration planting, and monitoring our restoration trees. See the map below for an overview of our restoration areas.



