“The time to accelerate conservation is now. Through the Greenlands Conservation Partnership, the Nature Conservancy of Canada (NCC) and the province have delivered 31 conservation projects, protecting over 164,200 hectares of lands,” said Mike Hendren, Regional Vice President – Ontario, Nature Conservancy of Canada. “These conserved areas help protect communities against the impacts of climate change and biodiversity loss and ensure accessible green spaces. NCC is grateful for Ontario’s ongoing support of the Greenlands program through which more natural areas, including forests, wetlands and grasslands, will be conserved and restored for people and nature.”
The program has contributed to some of Ontario’s most significant conservation efforts. For example, the Hastings Wildlife Junction project near Bancroft, to which the government contributed an additional $4 million, is protecting nearly 10,000 hectares (25,000 acres) of significant forest and wetlands, making it the second largest protected area in the region. The area is 75 times the size of Canada’s Wonderland.
“Ontario Land Trust Alliance welcomes this additional funding from the Government of Ontario for the Greenlands Conservation Partnership,” said Alison Howson, Executive Director, Ontario Land Trust Alliance. “In the first three years of the program, local and community land trusts created 44 new projects that conserve sensitive ecosystems and protect habitats for 85 species at risk, including 23 new properties that provide public access and increase the availability of green spaces for Ontarians to enjoy. Partners of this program, including OLTA, will build on the real measurable benefits already seen, preserving more natural areas of ecological importance and promoting community connection to these natural spaces.”
Partnering with conservation leaders is one way the government is working to preserve ecologically important natural areas and protect the province’s rich biodiversity.
Source : ontario.ca