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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Emerald Edge is the largest intact coastal rainforest remaining in the world. It is a 100-million-acre band of living forest and ocean stretching northward from the Olympic Peninsula of Washington, through Canada’s coastal British Columbia and the Great Bear Rainforest, to the panhandle of remote southeast Alaska. Its name was coined by The Nature Conservancy for its emerald-green, old-growth forests.
More than 35 First Nations and tribes have depended on these forests and the ocean for millennia. The area is also home to rich biodiversity — providing habitat for wildlife like grizzlies, spirit bears, wolves, elk, orca whales, humpback whales and salmon.[1]
The Emerald Edge encompasses 100 million acres across Washington’s Olympic Peninsula, through British Columbia, to Southeast Alaska. It contains many environmentally important areas, including the Hoh River and Olympic Rainforest in Washington, the Great Bear Rainforest and Vancouver Island in British Columbia, and the Tongass National Forest in Alaska, which is the largest national forest in the US[2]. The Emerald Edge contains 30,000 miles of coastline.
The Emerald Edge region is home to a variety of wildlife: coastal gray wolves, grizzly bears, Sitka deer, cougars, mountain goats, orca, salmon, sea lions, sea otters and humpback whales. It is ecologically significant because it contains 800-year-old trees thriving in old-growth forests.
The Emerald Edge is home to more than 400 fish species — including all five species of wild Pacific salmon[3]. 50% of all wild salmon stocks in the world return to rivers in the Emerald Edge. The Emerald Edge produces 50% of all the wild Pacific salmon in North America. In Washington’s Olympic Rainforest, salmon have declined to less than 10% of their historic numbers. The Tongass National Forest contains over 17,000 miles of salmon streams. The forest and its rich mossy understory are all fertilized by salmon remains. Salmon are the main food for not only grizzly bears, but black bears, wolves, marten, mink, eagles and other wildlife.
The Emerald Edge generates $15.1 million in annual tourism revenue from bear viewing. Grizzly bears that can only survive in massive, continuous landscapes. The Emerald Edge is one of the last such places left in North America and the world.
“Spirit Bears,” named because of the cultural significance they hold for Indigenous peoples, makes their home in the Emerald Edge’s Great Bear Rainforest. Spirit Bears are a rare sub-species of the American black bear; a recessive gene makes them white. Scientists estimate that between 100 and 500 Spirit Bears live in the wild.[4]
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