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For the Love of Animals: Investing in Wildlife Rehab, Research and Education at Salmonier Nature Park

The Honourable Derrick Bragg, Minister of Fisheries, Forestry and Agriculture, today provided an update on upgrades at Salmonier Nature Park, the provincial centre for wildlife rehabilitation, environmental education, and research.

Budget 2022 allocated $2 million over four years for infrastructure upgrades at the park. This year $500,000 will go towards upgrading the boardwalk trail system and wildlife enclosures, biosecurity enhancements to the park’s animal care building, and improving parking facilities and service roads.

Approximately 40,000 people visit Salmonier Nature Park annually, including nearly 5,000 youth who participate in on-site school programming. The park is also important to the nature-based tourism market. About 10 per cent of visitors are non-residents interested in learning about and viewing the Newfoundland and Labrador’s wildlife species.

Salmonier Nature Park serves as the department’s Wildlife Rehabilitation Centre for the care, rehabilitation, release or captive placement of injured or orphaned wildlife. Most injured or orphaned wildlife that come to the park for care are returned to the wild whenever possible; animals that cannot be released may be incorporated into on-site educational programming or shared with similar Canadian facilities.

A rescued moose calf currently in care at the park will be ready for public viewing later this summer. Thanks to 155 entries from schools and individual students from across the province, the park’s new moose ambassador will be named ‘Maple,’ as suggested by the Grade 1 class at Donald C. Jamieson Academy in Burin Bay Arm. More info on Maple is available on the Friends of Salmonier Nature Park Facebook page, and the department’s Twitter feed @FFA_GovNL.

Educational displays focusing on Newfoundland and Labrador’s wildlife species and natural heritage are on display in the visitor’s centre, and 84 species of birds, 15 species of mammals and over 170 species of vascular plants have been recorded within the park’s boundaries. Visitors can walk through boreal forest on a three-kilometre long boardwalk trail to view a variety of common species including Arctic fox, Canada lynx, Newfoundland marten, Woodland caribou, Great-horned owls, and other wildlife in their natural surroundings.

Source : GOV.NL.CA

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Huitlacoche, also known as the "Mexican truffle," is an edible fungus that forms on undeveloped corn ears and sells for as much as $40 a pound. Discovered by the Aztecs, the bulbous fungus has been consumed in Mexico for centuries and has recently become an increasingly popular specialty ingredient around the world.

However, the US has dedicated significant time and money to keeping its cornfields free of what they call "corn smut" and "the devil's corn." Huitlacoche forms naturally during the rainy season, but farmers can also inject the fungus into their cornfields to harvest the valuable "black gold". So why has Huitlacoche become so popular and what exactly makes it so expensive?