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White Moose Ranch in foothills southwest of Calgary protected from development

White Moose Ranch on Thursday, June 21, 2018. Brent Calver/Nature Conservancy of Canada

About 800 hectares of the White Moose Ranch in the foothills of southern Alberta have been protected from development.

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The Nature Conservancy of Canada has signed a conservation agreement with the landowners to restrict development rights on the 2,000-acre property, just west of the town of Turner Valley, Alta.

White Moose Ranch on Thursday, June 21, 2018. Brent Calver/Nature Conservancy of Canada

The conservancy says the land, a 35-minute drive southwest of Calgary, is facing pressure from urban developers.

Officials say protecting the area is a priority because it’s one of the last pieces of relatively intact fescue grassland in Alberta.

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READ MORE: Prairie grasslands disappearing at an alarming rate in Canada

They estimate that less than five per cent of native fescue grasslands remain in Canada, making the area one of the most threatened.

White Moose Ranch on Thursday, June 21, 2018. Brent Calver/Nature Conservancy of Canada

White Moose Ranch is also near the headwaters region of the Sheep River, which provides fresh drinking water to almost half of all Albertans.

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It was protected by landowners Stan Carscallen — a prominent lawyer in Calgary — his wife Eva Friesen — the president and chief executive of the Calgary Foundation — and their sons Brock and Gavin.

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“From the day our White Moose Ranch first acquired this breathtaking property in 1992, I knew that we needed to find a way to preserve it in its natural state,” Carscallen said in a news release.

Stan Carscallan on White Moose Ranch. Stan Carscallan

Carscallen operates a commercial beef cattle operation on the ranch. The conservation agreement will allow the cattle operation to continue while removing the pressure to ever subdivide the property or develop it.

READ MORE: Judge rules Alberta man ‘reasoned out his decision’ before selling ranch in contested deal

The land borders OH Ranch, a historic ranch founded in 1883 and bought in 1987 by Doc Seaman, a well-known oilman who was one of the original co-owners of the Calgary Flames.

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Stan Carscallan, pictured with Calgary Centre MP Kent Hehr, donated his White Moose Ranch property to the Nature Conservancy of Canada. Tom Reynolds, Global News

Together, the areas create a wildlife corridor approximately eight kilometres wide and 10 kilometres long, between the Highwood and Sheep rivers and adjacent to Kananaskis Country.

READ MORE: NCC scientist pens essay to save world’s most endangered ecosystem, grasslands

Carscallen said that before Seaman died in 2009, they frequently spoke about protecting the land between the Highwood River and the Sheep River.

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“This donation completes that dream, and my family and I are proud to be part of that accomplishment,” said Carscallen.

Other supporters of the White Moose Ranch project include the Alberta government through a land stewardship grant and the federal government through its natural areas conservation program.

READ MORE: Conservation group suggests year-round environmental action

White Moose Ranch is pictured in a Thursday, June 21, 2018, handout photo. Nature Conservancy of Canada, Brent Calver,
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