240 CONSERVATION OF CANADIAN WILD LIFE 
Duck and other wild fowl are abundant during the 
summer. 
Buffalo Park, Wainwright, Alta—In the account that has 
been given of the buffalo (p. 134) this park has already been 
described. The entire area consists of hilly and rolling 
country, with numerous lakes and bluffs, the largest lake 
being Jameson Lake. These lakes furnish splendid breed- 
ing-places for innumerable wild fowl, and when visiting the 
park I have been very strongly impressed with its unusual 
suitability as a wild-life reserve. The fact that most of the 
land is not adapted for agricultural development makes it 
all the more fitted for a reserve. 
In June, 1919, the population of the large animals was as 
follows: 
Buffelon: Petes eee ereietene 3,900. ' Mulle.deer’:).).1,..)s:clits bie neem 420 
IVLOOHE A \avitec ak hess kita: tee evant: 22 Antelope... iis a tees calc Aenea 2 
VATA Cicee lout cha utente ats 106 
Antelope Park, at Foremost, in southern Alberta, has 
already been described in the account of the antelope (p. 
71), of which there are now (1919) seventy-two* head in 
the reserve. 
Yoho Park.—Yoho Park comprises an area of about 560 
square miles on the western slope of the Rocky Mountains. 
It is divided into almost equal parts by the Kicking Horse 
River. Including as it does some of the most beautiful 
scenery to be found in the Rocky Mountain region, its chief 
value lies in its scenic attractions. But nevertheless it 
contains admirable natural feeding-grounds for the typical 
animals of this region. 
Glacier Park.—Situated amid the snow-capped peaks of 
the Selkirk Mountains, Glacier Park comprises an area of 
about 468 square miles. Lofty mountains, deep valleys 
clothed with dense forests of giant cedar, Douglas fir, hem- 
* In February, 1921, there were about one hundred antelope in the reserve. 
