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The Scoop: News that made headlines this week

Josh Piercey recaps the top news items from around the Okanagan-Shuswap region

Happy Earth Day!

Black Press Media鈥檚 Josh Piercey has got the rundown of the top headlines from across the Okanagan this week.

Millions of wild salmon make their way out of the Lower Fraser River and into the Strait of Georgia each year, but 2022 is the first time in more than 100 years their natural path hasn鈥檛 been obstructed.

In March, the Raincoast Conservation Foundation led a project to breach the North Arm Jetty, a seven-kilometre long barrier stretching from the Vancouver International Airport to the University of British Columbia. Tucked behind it is a brackish marsh habitat, vital for juvenile salmon to rear and feed in before transitioning into the ocean鈥檚 salty water.\

Residents in several parts of B.C. may not be especially pleased with the unseasonably cool weather they鈥檝e been receiving, but is has been good for one thing: ensuring the wildfire season gets off to a manageable start.

A cooler spring means the slower melting of snow and the assurance that grass and brush filled valleys won鈥檛 dry out too quickly, BC Wildfire Service information officer Jean Strong said.

If temperatures spike suddenly, all the snow reserves can be released at once, depleting fire-prone areas of future moisture. So, the slower and more consistent the snow melt the better, Strong explained.

As spring transitions into summer and the lakes thaw across British Columbia, boaters and anglers prepare for another season on the water.

However, as watercraft travel across the province this year, there is a risk of accidentally introducing of an invasive species decimating fish populations across North America known as whirling disease.

According to Sue Davies, outreach and aquatic coordinator at the Columbia Shuswap Invasive Species Society, it鈥檚 up to people in B.C. to keep the disease from ravaging fish in local lakes and rivers.

Whirling disease is caused by an invasive microscopic parasite known as known as myxobolus cerebralis. Victims of the disease are young salmonids, a family of fish including whitefish, trout and salmon, keystone species which are vital to the ecosystems in B.C. waters according to Davies.

The dancing lights of the aurora borealis lit up the skies all over British Columbia last weekend.

Those who didn鈥檛 have a chance to see the celestial phenomenon for themselves may be in luck, as experts predict an increased number of light displays over the coming years.

According to Bill Murtagh, Program Coordinator of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Space Centre, people in B.C. can expect to see more aurora borealis over the next three years as the sun reaches a significant date on its calendar.

鈥淲e鈥檙e certainly seeing things ramp up quite interestingly right now,鈥 said Murtagh.



josh.piercey@revelstokereview.com

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