Ecopassages help wildlife cross roads safely

With Earth Day fast approaching, now’s the perfect time to talk about how our ecopassages are helping protect Ontario’s wildlife!

You may have heard of wilderness corridors built for wildlife to cross over or under the TransCanada Highway. Ecopassages are mini versions of these, like a critter-sized subway tunnel passing under the road.

“Ecopassage” refers to specially designed fencing and culverts that aim to reduce roadkill by providing small animals with a safe way to cross the road.

Ecopassage fencing
The fencing encourages small creatures — like snakes — to follow the road until they find the culvert.

This is good for Ontario’s species at risk and province-wide biodiversity. It’s also one of the ways we’re building ecological resilience in a changing climate.

According to Brad Steinberg, Provincial Natural Heritage Education Coordinator:

Roads can fragment habitat by isolating ‘patches’ and making it risky, dangerous or impossible for some types of animals to move, migrate or re-populate areas.

hare in ecopassage

Fragmentation is made even worse by climate change, which may create conditions where species need to shift their range farther north because of changing temperatures, but can’t.”

How are we addressing habitat fragmentation?

Reptile crossing sign
Many parks also post “wildlife crossing” signs to encourage drivers to use caution.

We’re tackling the fragmentation caused by park roads in a number of ways. Rondeau Provincial Park, for example, converted one of its roads into a bike trail, saving hundreds of snakes from being run over every year.

We also support academic research on road ecology, and have teamed up with several researchers at Laurentian University to help improve the knowledge and management of roads in Ontario Parks and elsewhere.

And several provincial parks — including The Pinery, Killbear, Algonquin, Presqu’ile and Long Point — have installed ecopassages.

The Pinery’s ecopassage

The Pinery and The Friends of the Pinery recently joined forces to complete the park’s first ecopassage!

weasel in The Pinery ecopassage

The ecopassage was installed for two reasons:

  1. The construction of a new water control structure in the culvert below the Burley Causeway was going to limit the movement of mammals, reptiles and amphibians through the park.
  2. The Pinery had a history of observations of road mortality in the area.

An automated camera system has already begun to monitor animal movement through the passage. So far, raccoons, muskrats, beavers, chipmunks, red and gray squirrels, skunks and mice have all crossed through the passage.

beaver in ecopassage

This spring, park staff hope to record reptiles and amphibians using the ecopassage too.

Alistair MacKenzie — responsible for The Pinery’s NHE program and resource management — hopes the park will eventually have three ecopassages, one for each of the causeways that cross the park’s Old Ausable Channel.

Killbear’s ecopassages

Killbear‘s NHE leader Kenton Otterbein shared the park’s success with its four ecopassages.

These passages were designed specifically for the Massasauga rattlesnake, a threatened species living within the park.

massasauga rattlesnake

A spike in snake mortality on Killbear roads was first noted in 2005. By 2007, staff started adding special fencing to stop the snakes from crossing the roads.

Killbear’s first ecopassage was built in 2010. Three more have been added since. The specially designed culverts built under park roads allow for air and light to pass through which is thought to make them more attractive to snakes than regular culverts.

Masters student at Laurentian University, Mike Colley, spent 2013-14 collecting field research on ecopassage use, and his research has shown that rattlesnakes — along with other park creatures — are using them.

snake in ecopassage

Because the Massasauga rattlesnake is threatened, Killbear staff work hard to educate park visitors. A Massasauga rattlesnake and an eastern fox snake are cared for in the Visitor Centre so campers can see what they look like. In the summer, park naturalists host daily “snake talks.”

How can you help? Remember to slow down on park roads, and keep a careful eye out for snakes, turtles and other creatures.


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