
Board alternates Chris Heron (left) and Joe Martin share a laugh at the BQCMBs May meeting in Fond du Lac
Photo by Leslie Wakelyn
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IN THIS ISSUE ...
MONITORING MOVES FURTHER INTO THE RANGE

AROUND THE RANGE
ELDERS RECORD THEIR CARIBOU MEMORIES

MAD COW WOES COULD HURT SPORTS HUNT
DENE TO DEBATE SATELLITE COLLARING
NEW FIREFIGHTING POLICY FIZZLES
BQCMB SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS
FEDS PITCHED AGAIN ON NUNAVUT-MANITOBA ROAD
PEOPLE AND CARIBOU
MONITORING
MOVES FURTHER INTO THE RANGE
With plans to collect information from hunters in Tadoule Lake,
Manitoba, and
strong interest in community-based caribou monitoring from northern
Saskatchewan communities and the Athabasca Land Use Planning Interim
Advisory Panel (ALUP), the BQCMBs caribou monitoring project
is making
tracks from its Nunavut base camp into much of the range.
The project studies caribou, caribou range and community use in
relation to
climate change and land use activities. Since 2000, 80 interviews
have been
conducted with hunters and 16 interviews with elders some
of whom still hunt
in Arviat and Baker Lake. The long-term monitoring program
will provide
local and traditional knowledge to complement science-based monitoring
taking place across the caribou range.
The fourth jurisdiction through which Beverly and Qamanirjuaq caribou
herds range, the Northwest Territories, has a community-based caribou
monitoring program in Lutselke that began before the BQCMB
project.
Information will possibly be shared between the two like-minded
monitoring ventures.
Hunters and Trappers Organizations (HTOs) in Arviat and Baker Lake
fully
back the BQCMBs community-based monitoring approach, and have
aided the
process by helping to improve interview questions, choosing caribou
monitors
to conduct the interviews, and identifying hunters and elders to
be interviewed.
They've also made important suggestions that project organizers
have
incorporated into the interview methods used.
With several years under its belt, the project is now being evaluated
to make
sure research techniques are the best they can be, and that the
results are useful
to communities, the BQCMB, and agencies that manage Beverly and
Qamanirjuaq caribou herds and their habitats.
The Manitoba advantage
An efficient method for obtaining perspectives of hunters in one
community in
northern Manitoba may go ahead later this year, thanks to Manitoba
community
representative Albert Thorassie and an initial $5,000 in funding
from the
BQCMB. Thorassie already regularly collects harvest data from hunters
in his
community of Tadoule Lake on behalf of Manitoba Conservation. He
suggested
at the boards May meeting that he could ask hunters for their
observations of
caribou and changes on the range at the same time. Caribou monitoring
project
co-ordinator Leslie Wakelyn and community liaison Anne Kendrick
will help Thorassie draft a list of questions for hunters to
answer three times a year. Hunters will submit
their answers to Thorassie, who will in turn screen
them for accuracy and completeness, and pass
them on to the monitoring project co-ordinators.
Good timing for Saskatchewan
BQCMB members from Saskatchewan
communities have already requested monitoring
in their area, and the board's May meeting in Fond
du Lac gave Kendrick a chance to spend a few days
in Black Lake beforehand, speaking with several
elders to gauge their initial reaction to the
projects approach. As a result, a number of elders
came to the Fond du Lac meeting.
They were very positive about the thought of the project
happening, said Kendrick, who will be making a presentation
at the mid-August Dene Gathering in Black Lake to give residents
more information. Customizing community-based monitoring to each
regions circumstances is pivotal to success, she underlines.
Over the next few months, she will be asking communities how much
responsibility theyre able to take on so that were
not building something that is just an absolute burden for people
who are already involved in a lot of treaty entitlement work.
At the BQCMBs meeting, ALUP co-ordinator
Diane McDonald said the ALUPs steering
committee supported community-based caribou
monitoring by the BQCMB, even though it would
be happening outside of a proposed management
structure for the Athabasca Region. She reasoned
that it could complement wildlife responsibilities
of the proposed management structure, and if
successful, eventually be incorporated by it.
Community-based caribou monitoring will tie
in nicely with the goals of the ALUP, echoed the
Panels Simon Kearney, especially since the
number one species of concern up there is
caribou.
The earliest that the BQCMB could begin
monitoring in the Athabasca region would be
spring 2004, once funds are raised and the project
evaluation completed.
Evaluation keeps work on results-oriented path
Wakelyn and Kendrick are conducting an evaluation of the monitoring
project, an exercise requested at the November 2002 board meeting
by BQCMB government representatives. Assistance will be requested
from the Arctic Borderlands Ecological Knowledge Co-op, the monitoring
program that began about eight years ago on the range of the Porcupine
Caribou and upon which the BQCMBs program is modelled.
Wakelyn said that Borderland Co-op co-ordinator Joan Eamer has revised
and improved the BQCMBs monitoring database. Eamer, along
with Co-op team members Gary Kofinas and Don Russell, will be asked
to help assess the questions and techniques being used to determine
if the approach is indeed extracting information that people find
useful.
The evaluation, funded jointly by the Nunavut Wildlife
Management Board and the BQCMB, will provide board members
with the initial results of the assessment at the BQCMBs
November meeting. That should spur feedback from board
members about specific aspects of the program, leading
to a final evaluation report with recommendations by
January 2004.
[Click here
for an Inuktitut version of this article in PDF format.]
Back to top
AROUND THE RANGE
Milestone for Athabasca
 |
| Left
to right: BQCMB members David Aksawnee, August Enzoe, Black
Lake's Jimmy Bigeye, board member Deb Johnson and Orin Durey
of Baker Lake relax outside the A & C Lodge in Fond du Lac
Photo by
Leslie Wakelyn
|
An interim plan for the most critical area of land use in Saskatchewans
Athabasca region, the 25-kilometre corridor along both sides of
the road from Points North to Fond du Lac, was to go to members
of the Athabasca Land Use Planning Interim Advisory Panel at the
end of July for approval. This is Stage One of a three-stage plan
to better manage the Athabasca region's fish, wildlife and land
resources. The risk of Beverly caribou migrating near this road
has concerned the Panel, since the road has opened up the area to
southern hunters with treaty rights. A final version of the plan
is due out March 2004.
Toxic mine worries northerners
Indian and Northern Affairs Canada moved to erect a fence this
summer and fall at the
abandoned Colomac Mine 200 kilometres north of Rae, NWT after Dogrib
elders voiced their fears about caribou seen eating tailings at
the former gold mine. The water in the tailings containment area
has toxic cyanide, ammonia and metals in it.
Fears about contaminated mines harming caribou exist elsewhere
in the North, too. Last November, BQCMB community representatives
urged that all jurisdictions explore tools such as fencing to prevent
caribou from entering mine sites, since contaminated caribou meat
is a health risk to everyone living on the caribou range. Northern
Saskatchewan is a prime example. Close to 50 uranium mines and refineries
have operated since the 1940s, and some are still operating. Today
residents and caribou are faced with a web of radioactive
waste sites.
2004 Caribou Scholarship
Early birds, take note: the deadline for 2004 Beverly and Qamanirjuaq
Caribou Management
Scholarship Fund applications is Jan. 31, 2004, and there will be
a single award of $1,500.
For more details, contact the Association of Canadian Universities
for Northern Studies.
Tel.: (613) 562-0515, fax: (613) 562-0533, web site: www.cyberus.ca/~acuns
BQCMB meetings
Winnipeg is the regular host city for BQCMB November meetings,
and this next one, slated for Nov. 14 16, 2003, is no exception.
The board will then make its first-ever appearance in Hay River,
NWT for the spring meeting scheduled for May 28 30, 2004.
Back to top
ELDERS RECORD THEIR CARIBOU MEMORIES
So much change in so little time.
That was obvious during interviews in May with Baker Lake and Arviat
elders who were questioned about their decades of knowledge surrounding
the effects of change on caribou and their habitat, and the way
shifting weather patterns affect the health of caribou herds and
hunting. Anne Kendrick, BQCMB community liaison, and translators
Betsy Aksawnee of Baker Lake and Frank Nutarasungnik of Arviat conducted
the interviews. The elders, some of whom still hunt, included four
women and 12 men. The findings of the project a partnership
with the University of Alaska Fairbanks / Institute of Arctic Biology
will contribute to the BQCMBs community-based caribou
monitoring project.
One of the greatest changes in the North is on the scale of hardships.
These days, picking up supplies of sugar and tea involves a quick
five-minute walk to the grocery store. But for some of the elders
interviewed, who ranged in age from 65 to 80, picking up supplies
in the days before communities existed in the Kivalliq Region meant
a six-week dogsled trip from Ennadai to Yellowknife a journey
of more than 700 kilometres one way or a slightly shorter
trip from Ennadai to Churchill.
Nor will young people these days face starvation, as their grandparents
did, if the caribou
change their migratory routes. One elder interviewed survived the
terrible famine of the
1950s, when caribou veered away from their traditional routes in
the Arctic barrenlands, and
many people from the Ennadai and Back River areas died.
Many Baker Lake elders had spent some of their early years near
the lower Kazan River, site of the Fall Caribou Crossing National
Historic Site. They spoke of their travels, as well as the ban on
travel and hunting in the Thelon Game Sanctuary, established in
1927.
People mentioned it in a matter-of-fact way, without
resentment, says Kendrick.
As for changes in caribou over the decades, elders havent
really seen major differences in the
routes caribou have travelled, but people did talk about the
difference in behaviour in caribou, says Kendrick. Over and
over, people repeated that in the past, even the smell of
a human footprint would be enough to deflect a caribou. Caribou
arent nearly as skittish today.
Interviews were conducted using a specially designed
questionnaire and maps, and were recorded on audio cassette
and videotape. Information from the questionnaire and
maps will be entered into a database similar to the
one used for interviews of hunters. Summaries of the
results of the elders interviews will go first
to the elders and the HTOs in Baker Lake and Arviat
for verification, before being presented to the BQCMB.
Copies of the audio and video recordings will go to
the HTOs, the BQCMB and the University of Alaska Fairbanks.
It has been agreed that the videos lodged with the BQCMB
and the University of Alaska Fairbanks can only be shown
to others after first obtaining permission from the
HTOs.
[Click here
for an Inuktitut version of this article in PDF format.]
 |
| Elders
recalled the terrible caribou famine of half a century ago.
This photo of an unidentified Padleimiut man with a carcass
was taken in 1949
Photo by Richard Harrington, courtesy of Public Archives Canada
|
Back to top
MAD COW WOES COULD HURT SPORTS HUNT
One mad cow in Alberta could lead to a bad caribou sports hunting
season for northern
Canada this year.
Thats because the United States banned the import of all
ruminant animals and meat products
May 20 after one cow in Alberta tested positive for bovine spongiform
encephalopathy (BSE), or mad cow disease. A ruminant
is a hoofed animal with a compartmentalized stomach that chews food
regurgitated from the first stomach like cattle, or caribou.
Nunavuts caribou sports hunt alone is valued at about $750,000,
of which $500,000 stays in the territory. In the NWT, the annual
caribou sports hunt rings up a whopping $12.8 million, with about
900 hunters tracking caribou each year. Nunavuts muskox sports
hunt, valued at about $480,000 with 120 licensed hunts last year,
will also suffer under the U.S. ban.
If the ban is not lifted, those hunters will cancel or go
somewhere else, Simon Awa, assistant deputy minister of Nunavuts
Department of Sustainable Development, told Caribou News in Brief.
In May, Nunavut Premier Paul Okalik called on the Canadian Food
Inspection Agency to lobby for Nunavut caribou and muskox to be
exempted from the U.S. ban.
The ban has already hit the Rankin Inlet-based meat processing
firm Kivalliq Arctic Foods. A
$34,000 shipment of caribou meat bound for the States has been stuck
in a freezer since the ban was imposed. Most of Nunavuts $400,000
caribou meat industry is generated by the annual commercial harvest
on Southampton Island and subsequent sale of meat products from
Kivalliq Arctic Foods.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture is not lifting the ban because
of pressure from its trading partners, notably Japan. Japan will
not allow the importation of American beef if there is any
possibility that it could also include Canadian beef. In July, Prime
Minister Jean Chrétien began discussions with Japan to convince
it that Canadian beef is safe. Canada exports about 60 per cent
of its annual production of beef and live cattle.
A $460 million compensation package for the cattle industry was
announced by the federal
government, but that wont help most northerners. Awa says
if the U.S. ban drags on into September, Nunavut will have to be
included in the compensation package.
If you look at the whole BSE issue, the issue in Nunavut
is minuscule compared to the beef
issue, says Awa. But the revenues lost are a big part
of our economy.
Back to top
DENE TO DEBATE SATELLITE COLLARING
The sensitive issue of satellite collaring several Beverly caribou
was to be discussed at mid-
Augusts Dene Gathering in Black Lake.
Last year, the BQCMB agreed in principle that satellite collars
on select caribou would be a
prerequisite to any population survey. The Beverly and Qamanirjuaq
herds were last counted in 1994, and the Beverly herd is thought
to be close to its sustainable harvest limit if it hasn't
already passed it.
A small number of Qamanirjuaq caribou have worn satellite collars
since 1993, when the
government of the Northwest Territories launched the project to
broadly monitor the movements of the herd. The Beverly herd has
never been collared. Elders in northern Saskatchewan strongly oppose
the idea.
Others in Saskatchewan, though, would welcome it. BQCMB alternate
member Pierre
Robillard of Black Lake supports satellite collaring 100 per
cent and planned to speak in favour of it at the Dene Gathering.
He says young people from Black Lake and Fond du Lac are behind
him.
Its a really important issue for the generation down
the road, says Robillard. Times are
different now, with fewer young people living on the land. We
never live like old days no more.
Another alternate member, Joe Martin of Fond du Lac, points out
that communities are spending lots of money on charter flights to
search for the caribou that are staying further away these days
because of forest fire burns. We went out about three times
last year, Martin says, at an estimated cost of about $1,500
per charter.
At the other end of the Beverly herd range, Baker Lake residents
would like satellite collaring
on the Beverly herd. BQCMB member David Aksawnee, president of the
Baker Lake HTO, says his HTO discussed the matter prior to the BQCMBs
May meeting, and its come up at a recent meeting of the Kivalliq
Wildlife Board.
Its been a few years since the study has been done
for the Beverly herd and up to now, when I try to apply for commercial
tags, I get turned down because theres no recent study completed
on that area, says Aksawnee.
Questions from elders
At the BQCMBs Fond du Lac meeting, elders wanted to see examples
of the new lightweight satellite collars programmed to fall off
after two years. They also quizzed Manitoba community representatives
Jerome Denechezhe and Albert Thorassie about their experience with
collaring on the Qamanirjuaq herd. The two board members explained
that while their communities were initially against collaring, they
now saw the advantages in the location data obtained by satellite
collars. Another board member, August Enzoe of Lutselke, has
also seen his community benefit from satellite collars placed on
Bathurst caribou in recent years.
Both Martin and Robillard say many older people oppose satellite
collaring because of a
legendary incident that took place several hundred years ago in
the Athabasca region. As the
caribou were starting their spring journey north, some people tied
straps onto the antlers of certain caribou to identify them as their
own. That fall, there were no caribou. A family that travelled north
to search for the missing caribou discovered those wearing the straps
refused to cross a channel of water until they were chased into
doing so.
The caribou never come back in Lake Athabasca at least about
15 years, says Robillard.
Martin notes that a few elders support satellite collaring, however.
I think that, for myself, its
better to put a satellite collar on because then well know
where the caribous are. If people want to go hunting, theyll
know where they are.
Back to top
NEW FIREFIGHTING POLICY FIZZLES
Saskatchewans revised Forest Fire Suppression Priorities
have been greeted with major
disappointment in sparsely populated northern Saskatchewan, where
the province rates the lowest values-at-risk designations.
The new policy combats fire and forest insects and diseases using
an ecosystem-based management system. The old policy didnt
deal with forest insect and disease management, nor did it acknowledge
newer beliefs about the beneficial role in forest ecosystems of
natural and prescribed fire, insect activity and forest diseases.
In the new revised policy, the government gives human life and safety
the highest priority in its values-at-risk approach.
But in northern Saskatchewan where people survive on caribou
as a main source of food fires are equally as devastating.
Jerome Denechezhe of Manitoba, who has been a member of the BQCMB
since 1982, noted that even though the board has been discussing
fire suppression for more than 20 years, Saskatchewans new
policy still does not address the issue of fire suppression in northern
areas where fires wipe out livelihoods such as trapping, and destroy
caribou range.
The caribou food is all burnt. Thats why the caribou
dont come down, says BQCMB
Saskatchewan alternate member Joe Martin who urged, along with BQCMB
member Arthur Beck of Hay River, NWT, that letters be sent to all
jurisdictions calling for greater protection of the caribou range
than the Saskatchewan fire-fighting policy has given it. Although
rainy weather this year has staved off fires, Saskatchewan experienced
seven of its hottest years ever in the 1990s, resulting in more
forest fires.
Martin says that fire-ravaged land is stopping the caribou from
coming as close to his
community, Fond du Lac, as they used to. They probably come
down to 60 miles from Fond du Lac. Before they used to come right
down, down close, about 20 or 30 miles. The sight of scorched
earth runs north into the NWT, says Martin, who witnessed the devastation
firsthand last year while aboard a charter plane searching for caribou.
Martin says more protection is needed north of the Saskatchewan
border, too, because in the
Northwest Territories, they dont bother to fight when
fires start burning. . . . We need more
support from the Northwest government with the fire.
 |
| Northerners are unhappy with Saskatchewan's new forest firefighting policy, because it
gives the sparsely populated region the lowest priority when it comes to battling flames
Photo by Saskatchewan Environment
|
Back to top
BQCMB SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS
Crime-solving forensic scientists and this years winners
of the Caribou Management Scholarship have much in common.
 |
Keri
Zittlau
|
Both take clues from the scene of the action to build a picture
of what happened, and both find valuable information in flesh and
blood itself.
University of Alberta PhD student Keri Zittlau, a previous award
winner, continues to analyze
miscrosatellite DNA to figure out the range boundaries of various
caribou herds, including
the Beverly and Qamanirjuaq. (DNA is the chemical in humans and
animals that decides
what they will look and be like. Microsatellites are short DNA sequences
that reveal extensive genetic differences between individuals and
populations.)
Caribou migrate over huge distances, so it's hard to pinpoint their
range boundaries. But it's
important to know where migration routes are so that resource development
doesn't interfere with caribou movements, and suitable harvest levels
are assigned to each herd.
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Rebecca
Zalatan
|
Meanwhile, University of British Columbia PhD student Rebecca Zalatan
will use clues from plant life on the range of the Bathurst caribou
herd to paint a picture of past caribou population cycles and how
climate changes affected the herds. Caribou hoof scars left on spruce
roots across caribou trails provide an idea of the number of caribou
in that area, while the number of yearly growth rings in the spruce
trees provides a time frame, and the width of the ring itself tells
us what the weather was like. Hoof scars result when caribou stop
to eat the lichen off the spruce roots. The scars are preserved
in the actual tree ring. Zalatan has found scars that date back
200 years.
Another clue to past caribou populations and the climate of the
day is white mountain heather
and the impact of caribou grazing upon it. Scientists measure the
distance on the plant stem
between leaves to understand what climate was like. All of this
evidence combined will help
Zalatan in her ultimate goal: Id like to see if theres
some sort of large-scale climatic pattern
related to the movement of caribou. She and NWT biologist
Anne Gunn hope to combine
Zalatans findings with traditional knowledge about past caribou
populations to see how the
information all matches up.
Back to top
FEDS PITCHED AGAIN ON NUNAVUT-MANITOBA ROAD
A response from Indian and Northern Affairs (INAC) to a revised
application for federal funding to study route selection for a possible
Manitoba-Nunavut road was expected before the end of July.
The proposal, submitted by the Kivalliq Inuit Association (KIA)
in early July to INACs Resource Partnerships Program, calls
for $500,000 in federal dollars to top up the $500,000
contribution split equally between the governments of Manitoba and
Nunavut, and a
maximum $100,000 contribution from the KIA. A proposal for route
selection work submitted in the summer of 2002 was rejected by INAC
earlier this year because it didnt meet certain criteria under
the Resource Partnerships Program including the fact that
the proponent was not a First Nations, Inuit or Innu organization,
government or community-owned and controlled enterprise. Thats
when KIA joined forces with the governments of Nunavut and Manitoba,
and assumed the role of project proponent.
Hugh McMorrow of the Winnipeg-based consulting firm Price and Associates,
which has
been hired by KIA to spearhead the funding proposal, said that he
expects INAC to respond
within two weeks of the proposal being submitted. If approved, the
project would examine the merits of a half dozen road corridors,
each 15 to 20 kilometres wide, then narrow the selection down to
one corridor and study specific routes within that corridor to determine
the best route. Northern Manitoba and Kivalliq communities would
be consulted for their input on route selection as well.
A road would still not be a sure thing. As with any major development,
environmental impact
studies would have to be done and pass the scrutiny of land use
regulatory bodies. Most
importantly, the road project requires the full support of all residents
affected. Richard Connelly of the Manitoba-Nunavut Business Liaison
Office says there are still some major issues, such as treaty entitlement
in northern Manitoba, that must be addressed before a road goes
in.
Back to top
PEOPLE AND CARIBOU
 |
|
Daryll
Hedman
Photo
by Leslie Wakelyn
|
From the breakfast table to the board table, cooperation ruled
at the BQCMBs Fond du Lac meeting this past May. Many people
pitched in to ensure things ran smoothly. Former BQCMB chairman
Jerome Denechezhe demonstrated his skills as chairman, and
provided translation for many of the Dene in attendance as well.
Much appreciated was the assistance of Saskatchewan alternate member
Joe Martin in getting participants to and from the meeting.
Martin was filling in for Saskatchewan member Jimmy Laban, who was
unable to attend. And not to be overlooked were the culinary talents
of new Métis representative for South Slave communities Arthur
Beck, a seasoned tour guide who, with several quick flicks of
the wrist, had pancakes served up to all at the breakfast table
in the cooks absence. (The cook had been making her own moves
on the dance floor the previous night and didnt rebound as
quickly.)
 |
|
Joe Tigullaraq
Courtesy of DSD
|
Another new face at the board table is Manitoba Conservation wildlife
manager Daryll Hedman, who replaces former board member Cam
Elliott. In Nunavut, Joe Tigullaraq has replaced Stephen
Atkinson as the Director of Wildlife for the Department of Sustainable
Development (DSD). Atkinson plans to attend veterinary school.
DSD has offered to translate Caribou News in Brief into
Inuktitut and distribute it to HTOs in the Kivalliq Region. Nunavut
member Dan Shewchuk, DSDs manager of wildlife for the
Kivalliq Region, made the offer when the board couldnt finance
the request of community
members to obtain the publication in Inuktitut. DSDs assistance
will provide a great service to
Caribou News in Brief readers in the Kivalliq.
Just call her Dr. Anne Kendrick, community
liaison for the BQCMBs community-based
caribou monitoring project, earned her PhD from the University of
Manitoba after much
hard work, and has been awarded a post-doctoral position there as
well. This paid two-year research position is a windfall for the
BQCMB, too, because the position would allow Kendrick to do more
work for the board on range-wide caribou monitoring.
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