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There are a few ways that Deerberry is being protected. Parks Canada is assisting to help these programs. One way is a deerberry program that has been going on at St. Lawrence Islands National Park. They are working to establish deerberry saplings in greenhouse enviroments.
The Ontario Barn Owl Recovery Project started in 1997. The projects plan is too increase Ontario's Barn owl population to a self-sustaining level.
The causes of endangerment to Deerberry is variable. Fire suppression, habitat loss, and degradation are threats to Deerberry. Deerberry survive in habitats where climate is moderated by nearness to large bodies of water like the Niagara. In Ontario they could be found in dry open woods.
The Barn owl lives in a particular area of Ontario because it needs to live in special places. The Barn owl needs a wide range of habitats, including deserts, rough grasslands, forests, field and urban areas. In winter they land in woods, trees or barns to stay alive and warm. The biggest threats to Barn owls are severe weather and humans.
Barn owls live in every continent but Antarctica. In Ontario there is about less than five pairs of barn owls left. They live in southern Ontario and British Columbia.
Deerberry is native to North America, in Ontario, the eastern U.S.A. and parts of Mexico. There is only six sites with existing population in Ontario,
one in the Niagara area and five in The thousands islands area.
A barn owl has a white, heart shaped face, a short tail and long legs.
Deerberry is a shrub that has oval shaped leaves with pointed tips and bell shaped flowers.
The scientific name for Deerberry is Vaccinium stamineum.
Deerberry might also
The scientific name for the Barn owl is Tyto alba.
Barn owls eat mice, rats and mostly small mammals.
They use their keen sense of hearing to capture prey.
be known as buckberry, southern gooseberry or squaw huckleberry. The fruit from a deerberry plant is
edible and is bitter.
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Endangered Species: a species of animal or plant that is at risk of becoming extinct.