
Scientists trying to save B.C.’s western rattlesnakes from becoming roadkill
VANCOUVER — British Columbia’s rattlesnakes may not get much respect, but scientists are working to change that — and in the process, save a diminishing species.
University and government researchers have been focusing on one population of western rattlesnakes in a fairly pristine basin where there hasn’t been much development.
But even in this “big, round bowl in the South Okanagan Valley,” the creatures are under threat, according to Karl Larsen, a professor in the natural resource science department at Thompson Rivers University in Kamloops.
He says the Okanagan region’s long, cold winters and short summers mean females can’t reproduce every year.