The Honourable Derrick Bragg, Minister of Fisheries, Forestry and Agriculture, today provided an update on upgrades at Salmonier Nature Park, the provincial centre for wildlife rehabilitation, environmental education, and research.
Budget 2022 allocated $2 million over four years for infrastructure upgrades at the park. This year $500,000 will go towards upgrading the boardwalk trail system and wildlife enclosures, biosecurity enhancements to the park’s animal care building, and improving parking facilities and service roads.
Approximately 40,000 people visit Salmonier Nature Park annually, including nearly 5,000 youth who participate in on-site school programming. The park is also important to the nature-based tourism market. About 10 per cent of visitors are non-residents interested in learning about and viewing the Newfoundland and Labrador’s wildlife species.
Salmonier Nature Park serves as the department’s Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre for the care, rehabilitation, release or captive placement of injured or orphaned wildlife. Most injured or orphaned wildlife that come to the park for care are returned to the wild whenever possible; animals that cannot be released may be incorporated into on-site educational programming or shared with similar Canadian facilities.