All six of the victims of Sunday's plane crash tragedy have been identified. Two California residents and four residents of Metro Vancouver, including a maternity doctor and her six-month-old daughter, have died.

Kerry Margaret Morrissey (nee Telford), and her six-month-old daughter, Sarah, were killed when the float plane they were in crashed during takeoff in Lyall Harbour, off Saturna Island, Sunday.

The 41-year-old was returning to Vancouver from a doctor's conference with her daughter when the plane went down just after 4 p.m.

The plane pilot and a female passenger were rescued shortly after the crash. Both are expected to recover.

In Pictures: Saturna Island Crash

B.C. Mounties identified the victims as Catherine White-Holman, 55, of Vancouver and Thomas Gordon Glenn, 55, of White Rock.

American citizen Richard Bruce Haskitt, 49, and Cindy Shafer, 44, both of Huntington Beach, California, also perished.

The cause of the crash has yet to be determined.

Morrissey

Morrissey leaves behind a husband and another young daughter.

The Vancouverite, a family physician, had just returned to work at the South Community Birth Program, a multidisciplinary service aimed at improving the health of at-risk pregnant women in South Vancouver.

She also worked at the Raven Song Community Health Centre in Vancouver, an agency that provides health care services for parents and children.

She taught as an instructor at the University of British Columbia Department of Family Practice since 2006. She graduated from UBC in 1993.

Telford did extensive work internationally, once spending nine months volunteering in a hospital in the Peruvian jungle.

Schafer and Haskitt

California residents Haskitt and Shafer were on their way home from their vacation home on Saturna Island when the float plane crashed.

Shafer, a Canadian citizen, was a photographer with a great respect for the environment.

Haskitt was a district manager with pharmaceutical company Pfizer.

Haskitt's father, Dick, said the pair visited their home in Canada as often as possible.

"I think the attraction was that it was a place for them to get away," he said.

"It was secluded and it gave them a chance to just relax and get away from city life."

The couple enjoyed mountain biking and traveling the world, to Vietnam, Eastern Europe and Morroco, the father added.

The impact

The small island community of Saturna Island has been shaken by the crash.

Ilka Olsen was friends with two of the victims.

"They were well known in the community," she told CTV News. "They were both extremely vivacious, vibrant people."

Bob Bruce also knew the couple. He says they frequented the island often, and were very friendly.

"This is pretty shocking," he said. "This is a sad day on Saturna."

The survivors

The plane pilot and a female passenger were rescued from the Seair de Havilland Beaver shortly after the crash.

The woman was pulled from the water hypothermic, but both are in stable condition. The pair is recovering at Victoria General Hospital.

A Transportation Safety Board investigation began Monday morning.

Bill Yearwood of the TSB said it would be at least another day until the submerged plane will be raised.

Yearwood says the TSB is hopeful the pilot can tell investigators what went wrong after takeoff.