“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.”
AWA on the Wild for Change Podcast
AWA in the news: State wildlife officials trying to revive Southwest Alaska caribou killed almost 100 brown bears in less than a month
‘The surprisingly high number of bears killed in the Mulchatna program is “especially egregious” given those findings, said Carol Damberg, board president of the Alaska Wildlife Alliance. "They’re ignoring their own biology ... they’re not following the science,” Damberg said Thursday. “If they were, they wouldn’t be doing this.”’
The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly of the Southcentral Board of Game meeting
Cook Inlet Water Quality Summit Annoucned!
Breaking News: Victory for Brown bears and other wildlife on the Kenai!
Overview of Trap Setback Proposals on the Kenai Peninsula
Our efforts to reduce harm on already threatened Southern Beaufort Sea polar bears
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
2022 Annual Report
StoryMap! Wildlife and the new Sterling Highway underpasses
Why do moose cross the road? To get to the other side, of course — as do other wildlife like lynx, caribou, bears and wolves. The nature of the beast is that dens and calving areas and salmon and hardwood browse and berries don’t all occur in the same place. View a new storymap that demonstrates new wildlife crossings on the Sterling Highway!
AWA on the Alaska Law Review 'Alaska and the Environment' Panel
Protecting Bristol Bay Wildlife
VICTORY! Court upholds prohibition of brown bear baiting in the Kenai Refuge
Alaska Wildlife Alliance and our coalition partners celebrated a U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals decision today that upheld a 2016 U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service rule that enshrines the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge’s long-standing prohibition on brown bear baiting, along with its decades-long approach of managing the Skilak Wildlife Recreation Area for wildlife viewing and education.
We're in Alaska’s Superior Court to protect Alexander Archipelago wolves
In the News: OPINION: Alaska has changed. It’s time for trapping regulations to change too.
“When it comes to types of trapping that clearly infringe on the ability of other groups to safely use outdoor public spaces, decisions should be made in a collaborative process that involves representation from a more diverse range of affected groups. Parents of young children, skiers, hunters, hikers, search and rescue volunteers, mushers and others deserve to have a seat at this table.”
There are no trapping regulations in the state of Alaska- it’s time for the Alaska Board of Game to make the change. Read on to learn more about this issue.