“In the past three decades, the Mulchatna caribou herd of southwestern Alaska has gone from nearly 200,000 to 12,000. Last year, the state wildlife agency’s Board of Game started to explore ways to help the struggling population. It landed on a controversial solution called "intensive management," also called predator control, which directs wildlife officials to indiscriminately kill predators. It was the first time the state included bears in the hunt, a decision that had no public process and was conducted without bear population estimates.”
The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly of the Southcentral Board of Game meeting
Overview of Trap Setback Proposals on the Kenai Peninsula
Action Alert! Comment to support a new National Park Service Rule that protects bears, wolves and people
Wildlife crossings, trap setbacks, and more: Get involved in the Southcentral Board of Game process
Southeast Board of Game meeting summary
Speaking up for wildlife at the Southeast Board of Game meeting
2022/23 Board of Game proposals
Protecting Bristol Bay Wildlife
Victory! Reducing halibut trawl bycatch in the Bering Sea
Petition to Protect Lower Cook Inlet Wildlife
Help Reduce Halibut Bycatch
What happened at the Special Board of Game meeting, March 2021
Action Alert! Proposed Designations of Critical Habitat for Ringed and Bearded Seals in Alaska
Comment to support critical habitat designations for ringed and bearded seals
Army Corps Denies Pebble Mine Permit! ...so it's over?
VICTORY! Court upholds prohibition of brown bear baiting in the Kenai Refuge
“We believe that the Fish and Wildlife Service is obligated to protect Kenai brown bears on the refuge and this opinion recognizes the agency’s authority to do just that,” said Nicole Schmitt, executive director of the Alaska Wildlife Alliance. “At a time when so many of Alaska’s wildlife protections are being rolled back, this ruling comes as a sigh of relief for all those who enjoy the Refuge and its wildlife.”