Four experts who will help craft new legislation and recommend new actions to promote biodiversity in Nova Scotia have been chosen for the new Biodiversity Council.
The members are:
- Donna Hurlburt, aboriginal advisor at Acadia University, Mi’kmaw ecologist and conservation biologist;
- Kate Sherren, associate professor and academic programs co-ordinator of the Dalhousie School for Resource and Environmental Studies;
- Graham Forbes, professor at the University of New Brunswick and the director of the New Brunswick Cooperatives Research Unit and the Sir James Dunn Wildlife Research Centre; and
- Peter Oram, senior environmental specialist at the technical consulting and management services provider GHD.
The experts begin their work immediately and are appointed for two-year terms.
A new Biodiversity Act will enable Nova Scotia to improve the conservation and sustainable use of wild species and ecosystems in flexible and adaptive ways, address legislative gaps and manage emerging risks.
Creating a new Biodiversity Council is included in the 2017 mandate letter of the Natural Resources Minister Margaret Miller.