$12
2x your stamp contribution
Help restore streamside vegetation and keep local waters cool – Your gift can plant two native trees.
Your donation will help provides grants to streamkeepers, First Nations, and conservation groups to save and restore salmon.
Here are just a few examples of your funds hard at work!
Your support is helping restore salmon habitat near Agassiz in the Fraser Valley.
Thanks to stamp funds and generous donor support, PSF was able to grant $112,384 to the Sq’éwqel (Seabird Island Band) to restore spawning channels in Maria Slough, important habitat for an endangered Chinook population. The restored spawning channels will keep water cooler, oxygen-rich, and flowing longer through drought.
The new Courtenay Fish & Game club hatchery is helping young Chinook and coho survive extreme heat by drawing cold water from Comox Lake. Volunteers are now adding an emergency refuge pond to protect wild salmon during dry spells.
Nearly $100,000 in grants from PSF, fueled by conservation stamp funds and generous donors, made these beneficial hatchery additions possible.
Green infrastructure like rain gardens can filter over 90% of the toxic tire chemical 6PPD-quinone from stormwater before it reaches salmon streams.
Thanks to donors like you, PSF granted $22,500 to Peninsula Streams Society this spring to install two new rain gardens in Greater Victoria. This project is empowering local stewards to protect sensitive urban habitat — and the salmon who rely on it.
The Salmon Conservation Stamp, a decal anglers much purchase with a saltwater fishing license to catch and keep Pacific salmon. It is the primary funding source for the Community Salmon Program. Every year, PSF stewards all proceeds from the stamp on behalf of Fisheries and Oceans Canada (DFO) to support community-led salmon conservation. The price of the stamp is set by the federal government through regulation.