Environmental Inventory and Management Strategy Survey
Thank you for your input. Public feedback on this project is currently closed.
Tell us what matters to you on important environmental issues including invasive species, human-wildlife conflicts, conservation, natural assets, and parks and trails.
Project Overview
The Environmental Inventory and Management Strategy (EIMS) project will assess the City’s natural assets and identify supportive management strategies. We need your local knowledge to fill in the blanks and help identify management priorities.
Natural assets include the ecosystems (e.g., wetlands, forests, rivers) and resources (e.g., plants, animals, air, water, soils, minerals) that provide benefits and services to people. For example:
- healthy wetlands can filter harmful contaminants and store floodwater;
- forests and croplands produce oxygen, storeContinue reading
1. What are the City's most valuable natural assets?
Natural assets are assets of the natural environment. These consist of biological assets (produced or wild), land and water areas with their ecosystems, subsoil assets, and air. These are parts of the natural environment that we consider important for various reasons, and which would cost money if they were lost and we needed to replace them.
Examples of natural assets include: forests, sloughs, wetlands, fish producing areas, timber producing areas, rivers, lakes, greenways, aquifers, ecosystems and features that contain and absorb flood waters, etc., root systems that prevent soil erosion and slope failures in areas at risk of erosion, areas of high biodiversity, habitat for rare or important species, tree rows reducing dust.
Please click on the '+' sign on the left to add a pin and answer the associated question.
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2. Which of the City’s natural assets are most degraded presently?
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3. What natural assets should the City prioritize for protection?
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4. What natural assets should the City prioritize for restoration or enhancement?
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5. What natural assets in the Agricultural Land Reserve (ALR) provide important benefits to farmers?
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6. What natural assets in the ALR should be prioritized for conservation?
Some examples include above and below ground water sources, trees to prevent dusting, features that limit flooding, plants that clean pollutants from runoff, productive soils, features that protect or promote biodiversity or important species, features that protect water from evaporation and loss in the increasingly hot and dry summers, pervious (i.e., unpaved) ground surface that reduces storm water runoff in the city.
Please click on the '+' sign on the left to add a pin and answer the associated question.
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7. Please identify important habitats or areas for species of concern you would like to note in the City of Pitt Meadows.
Species of conservation concern include fish, birds, mammals, amphibians, reptiles, invertebrates, and/or plants.
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Please note the species being referred to. Please note that the location of critical habitat may be sensitive or confidential.
Information on critical habitats will be considered, carefully managed, and will not be published in the EIMS report.
8. Please identify if there are any important habitats or areas for species that are important to you (rareness aside) you would like to note in the City of Pitt Meadows.
Please click on the '+' sign on the left to add a pin and answer the associated question, also please note the species being referred to
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9. Please identify areas where you have witnessed human-wildlife conflicts within the City of Pitt Meadows.
Please click on the '+' sign on the left to add a pin and answer the associated question and please note the human -wildlife interaction being referred to.
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10. Please identify locations where invasive species (plant or animal) should be prioritized for management.
An invasive species, also called introduced species, alien species, or exotic species, is any nonnative species that significantly changes or disrupts the ecosystems it colonizes. Such species may arrive in unknown areas through natural migrations, but they are often introduced by the activities of humans.
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Which City parks, trails, and open spaces do you visit most often?
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You are welcome to place more than one pin.