Climate change threatens seal hunting by Indigenous Alaskans
Heather McFarland
907-474-6286
August 24, 2021
Climate change has severely reduced the length of the seal hunting season in a rural
Alaska village, potentially threatening a key feature of the community’s Indigenous
way of life.
The Iñupiaq people of Kotzebue have depended on bearded seals, called ugruk in Iñupiaq,
for food and clothing for generations. A led by Indigenous hunters, the Native Village of Kotzebue and scientists at the University
of Alaska Fairbanks shows that over the past 17 years, the seal hunting season shrank
about one day per year. Sea ice decline is a major cause of the shrinking season.
Both ugruk and hunters are closely tied to specific sea ice conditions. In spring,
ugruk follow the melting Chukchi Sea ice edge northward during breakup and enter Kotzebue
Sound. Inside the sound, ugruk rest on persistent chunks of floating ice, called floes,
while feeding on abundant fish, shrimp and clams.
“Kotzebue Sound provides important spring habitat for bearded seals, with ice floes
as platforms for seals to rest on between foraging bouts,” said Donna Hauser, marine
mammal biologist at the UAF International Arctic Research Center and co-leader of
the research. “We learned from our Kotzebue research partners that hunting ugruk is
actually like hunting the right kind of ice.”
Hunters safely and predictably found ugruk on these resting platforms in the past.
The study combined hunters’ knowledge of the ice conditions needed for ugruk hunting
with data from satellite images. The results showed that the necessary ice floes now
melt from the Kotzebue Sound roughly 22 days earlier than they did in 2003, the first
year of the study.
“We used to hunt ugruk into July when I was growing up back in the 1950s,” said Bobby Schaeffer, a Kotzebue elder, hunter and co-author of the new paper. “People would be out there during Fourth of July celebration because there was so much ice. Now sometimes we’re done before June comes around.”
While the hunting season is pushed to a close about 26 days earlier on average than
in the past, hunters are not necessarily able to begin hunting any earlier. The season’s
start timing is driven by the arrival of seals and a hunter’s ability to launch boats
through a channel in the ice that opens in front of Kotzebue.
Squeezing the hunting season into a shorter window means that there is less flexibility
for hunters.
“Now in some years there is only a good weekend or two, and, if people want to maximize
their opportunity, they have to prepare before the season even starts,” said Alex
Whiting, director of the Native Village of Kotzebue’s Environmental Program and co-leader
of the research.
Whiting’s weekly observations of the local weather, ugruk activity and hunting pursuits
of Kotzebue residents helped to quantify the shrinking ugruk hunting season.
Whiting said he was inspired to start a journal in 2002 after reading records of Alaska
from the early 1900s.
“When you’re living in the present, daily activities don’t seem particularly notable
or remarkable,” explained Whiting. “But I understood that they would be useful over
time and that things were changing rapidly, and it would be great to have a record
of it.”
Even with the shrinking season, Whiting’s tribal records show that harvest success
has not significantly changed. Instead, it is the type of hunting experience that
has shifted. Past ice floes were large and complex, and hunters had to search long
and far to find ugruk. Now, with less ice, hunters typically embark on shorter, more
frequent trips.
Hunters have noticed that ugruk seem to have changed their behavior too. They often
congregate in large groups on the scarce ice floes. Spring 2019 stood out to hunters
and scientists because Kotzebue Sound was nearly void of ice. Hundreds of ugruk gathered
on just a few floes near Kotzebue. Hunting success was high, and effort was low.
Hunters worry that in future years, ugruk and ice floes may be farther from Kotzebue
across large expanses of open water, increasing the risk to boaters and lowering their
chance of a successful hunt.
This research was part of a larger collaborative project called Ikaaġvik Sikukun,
that also included researchers from Columbia University, the University of Washington
and Farthest North Films, and funding from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation.
Additional co-authors include Andy Mahoney, John Goodwin, Cyrus Harris, Roswell Schaeffer
Sr., Nathan Laxague, Ajit Subramaniam, Carson Witte, Sarah Betcher, Jessica Lindsay
and Chris Zappa.
CONTACTS: Donna Hauser, dhauser2@alaska.edu, 907-474-1553; Alex Whiting, alex.whiting@qira.org
NOTE TO EDITORS: Additional high resolution images are available upon request. Contact Heather McFarland hrmcfarland@alaska.edu.
018-22