Moose population boom, linked to climate change, inspires some hunting changes - Alaska Public Media

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Moose population boom, linked to climate change, inspires some hunting changes - Alaska Public Media
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In one region of Southwest Alaska, the moose population has increased a whopping 400-fold since the 1990s. It's just one example of climate change-related changes that are forcing Alaska's hunting managers to rethink regulations. Via AlaskaBeacon

In Kotzebue, for example, subsistence hunters are coping with afor their spring hunts of bearded seals. The ice floes that the seals rest on melt away earlier, so hunters make more frequent boat trips over a shorter time period, a change detailed in recently published research.

Overall, beaver trapping is a lot of work for little reward, as “the fleshing and putting up of beaver is the most labor intensive of all the fur, especially for novices,” Whiting said by email, referring to the region’s fur-bearing animals. Fur prices are low in the commercial markets, and fur from animals like sea otters is generally preferred, Whiting said by email. Harvesting beavers “is more complicated trapping than most, because most of the sign is underwater and the trap sites are covered in ice and snow,” he said, and working on the ice can be unsafe.

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