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Banff National Park of Canada
Park Management

Highway Fencing and Wildlife Crossings
10 quick facts about highway wildlife crossings in the park
Black bear leaving hair sample on barbed wire
© Western Transportation Institute / Parks Canada
Photos of wildlife using animal underpasses and overpasses. These images were taken by remote sensing cameras.
© Tony Clevenger, Western Transportation Institute / Parks Canada
- In response to growing traffic volumes, collisions and wildlife roadkill,
the 83 km section of Trans-Canada Highway in the park began to be upgraded
from two lanes to a four lane divided highway in 1981.
- To date, there are 22 wildlife underpasses and two wildlife overpasses
along a 45 km section of fenced and twinned Trans-Canada Highway that runs
from Banff National Park’s east entrance to Castle Junction.
- Highway fencing in Banff National Park has reduced wildlife-vehicle collisions
by more than 80% and, for elk and deer alone by more than 96%.
- Wildlife crossings are designed to connect vital habitats and allow safe
movement of animals across busy roads.
- There is no other location in the world with as many and different types
of wildlife crossings as in Banff National Park. It also has the world’s
longest, year round monitoring program and largest data set on wildlife
use of highway crossings.
- Eleven species of large mammals have used the 24 wildlife crossings between
the park’s east gate and Castle Junction more than 186,000 times since
1996 (as of April 2009). This includes: grizzly and black bears, wolves,
coyotes, cougars, moose, elk, deer, bighorn sheep, and more recently wolverine
and lynx.
- There is a "learning curve" for animals to begin using wildlife crossings
after construction. For wary animals like grizzly bears and wolves, it may
take up to five years before they feel secure using newly built crossings.
Elk were the first large species to use the crossings, even using some while
they were under construction!
- Grizzly bears, wolves, elk, moose and deer prefer wildlife crossings that
are high, wide and short in length, including overpasses. Black bears and
cougars prefer long, low and narrow crossings.
- DNA research is now underway to identify individual animals using the
crossings. DNA hair samples are collected using barbed wire strung across
wildlife crossing structures. The data will reveal adult male and female
movement across roads, as well as dispersal, survival and reproduction of
young. This will answer "how" wildlife crossings help to sustain healthy
wildlife populations into the future.
- More wildlife crossings will be built as the remaining 33 km two-lane
section of highway from Castle Junction to the British Columbia border is
twinned.
Photos of wildlife using animal underpasses and overpasses. These images were taken by remote sensing cameras.
© Tony Clevenger, Western Transportation Institute / Parks Canada
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