Calgary

Banff gets ready for bison return by preparing land with controlled burns

The park is doing controlled burns in backcountry grasslands to get the land ready for when it reintroduces bison to the area 2017.

Parks Canada has 4 fires on the go in backcountry grasslands

Banff National Park is preparing for the reintroduction of bison to the area in 2017. (Parks Canada/CNW Group)

If you've seen smoke billowing over Banff National Park recently — don't be alarmed.

There are four controlled burns happening in the backcountry right now to make space for some new residents. A herd of 30 to 50 young bison will be reintroduced to the park in 2017.

"They're doing the burns to just bring the grasslands back to normal. To refresh the habitat, but also to expand the meadows and prevent the encroachment of the trees keys," said Marie-Eve Marchand, co-ordinator of the Bison Belong campaign in Banff National Park.

Marchand says there is evidence that Alberta's indigenous groups hunted bison by attracting them to parcels of land they had set fire to.

"And that's what's Parks Canada is doing with controlled burns, to just refresh the Prairie." 

She says there will be more prescribed burns in Banff National Park in the spring and fall of 2016.

Fences going in

Parks Canada has also started testing outside permeable fencing that would allow bison and other wildlife to move in and out of the protected area.

It is estimated that by the 1890s, there were fewer than 2,000 bison left in North America. (Phil Hossack/Winnipeg Free Press/Canadian Press)

"The idea is that it will discourage them from doing so, and the fences will keep the bison in the area that is best for them. Basically, we're trying to teach them the best places to survive in the park," said Marchand.

The bison will be released deep in the backcountry, far away from roads, rail tracks, roads and tourists. But Marchand says visitors will eventually spot them.

"We all agree that we want to see them," said Marchand. "[But] The beautiful thing is within five years, the habitat will be open all the way to the north side of Lake Minnewanka loop."