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| Taiga Plains Terrestrial Ecozone
The northern reaches of the ecozone feature a rich diversity of plants, birds, and mammals from both the Subarctic and the Arctic. The southern portion is home to the world's largest Wood Bison herd, contains the only known nesting site of the endangered Whooping Crane, and encompasses the sprawling Peace-Athabasca Delta, a wetland habitat of global significance. Settlement of the Taiga Plains began around 11 000 years ago, near the end of the last ice age. At this time the Paleo-Indian people began moving through an ice-free corridor that stretched down the Mackenzie Valley to the Peace-Athabaska area of western Alberta. Over the past 300 years, the area has played a major role in the northern fur trade, development of frontier oil and gas resources, and provision of a major water transportation route through northwestern Canada.
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