Two federal agencies this week took steps to increase hunting and trapping on several national preserves in Alaska and in the popular Kenai National Wildlife Refuge.
The new rules will support extreme measures to kill predators and their young in national preserves in Alaska. The proposed rule change would allow brown bear baiting in the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge for the first time.
Photo courtesy of Ken Canning
Alaska leaders praised the changes, and hunting groups and a tribal consortium said the new rules will support sport and subsistence hunters in the national preserves.
The National Park Service and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service said in separate statements that their actions are designed to align federal and state law.
In the broadest action, the park service announced a final rule
that will roll back 2015 prohibitions, adopted under President Barack Obama, affecting hunting and trapping in national preserves in Alaska.
The agency manages 10 preserves in the state, including at Denali National Park and Preserve, where the preserve lies west of the park.
Park lands would not be affected by the new rule, the agency said. The new rule should be published in the Federal Register at the end of the month, said Peter Christian, a spokesman with the agency in Alaska.
He said the new rules are designed to allow hunters to take:
• Black bears, including cubs and sows with cubs, with artificial light at den sites.
• Black and brown bears over bait.
• Wolves and coyotes, including pups, during the denning season.
• Swimming caribou.
• Caribou from traveling motorboats
“These harvest practices would be allowed in national preserves where authorized by the state of Alaska,” Christian said.
The rule, “Sport Hunting and Trapping in National Preserves in Alaska,” will be published in the Federal Register beginning a public comment period. After the proposed rule publishes, it can be found at www.regulations.gov by searching for “1024-AE38.”
Clearly, the state wants to increase game populations by driving down carnivore numbers, and these federal changes will certainly support that effort:
A 2018 federal environmental assessment of the rollback in the preserves said that the subsistence harvest of moose and caribou could increase.
Victor Joseph, chair of the Tanana Chiefs Conference, said the group representing 42 tribes in the Interior supports the rollback. The 2015 rule was implemented without “adequate tribal consultation,” he said in a statement sent by the park service.
“The previous limitations enacted in 2015 threatened our way of life and our centuries-long sustainable management practices,” he said in the statement.
Separately, the Fish and Wildlife Service said in its statement Wednesday it will propose changes
affecting rules for the Kenai National Wildlife Refuge.
The changes at the refuge, the most-visited in Alaska, would allow:
• State-regulated harvest of brown bears at registered bait stations.
• State-regulated trapping.
• The discharge of firearms along the Kenai and Russian rivers from Nov. 1 to April 30, in accordance with state law.
• Increased access for people using snowmachines, all-terrain vehicles and utility task vehicles on certain lakes for ice fishing when there is adequate ice cover.
• Increased access for the public using bicycles and game carts.
The proposed rule changes for the refuge will be published in the Federal Register in the coming days, the statement said.
The proposed change would allow hunters to kill browns at bait stations for the first time.
Gov. Mike Dunleavy and Alaska’s congressional delegation supported the changes, saying the new rule reaffirms Alaska’s authority over wildlife management in the preserves.
“With the release of this final rule, we are eliminating a wrongful federal seizure of Alaska’s authority,” U.S. Rep. Don Young said in the statement sent by the park service.
Alaska leaders also expressed support for the change proposed in the refuge.
“Expanding recreational opportunities and state management in the magnificent Kenai Refuge benefits Alaskans and tourists alike, and I thank President (Donald) Trump and Secretary (David) Bernhardt for their commitment to listening to Alaskan voices,” Dunleavy said in a statement.
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