August 20, 2004
Polar bear quota increase not enough for communities
"There wasn't enough
IQ in it"
JANE GEORGE
Hunters in Nunavut won't see any increases in the number of polar bears they
can hunt until HTOs in Iqaluit, Gjoa Haven and Cambridge Bay approve quota proposals
that allow for a marginal increase in bear kills. (FILE PHOTO)
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Hunters and trappers organizations have approved eight of 10 agreements on
how to manage polar bears in Nunavut.
But two proposals for memoranda-of-understanding are still in limbo, because
HTOs in Iqaluit, Cambridge Bay, and Gjoa Haven still face divvying up too few
bears among too many people.
These HTOs are slowing down the final approval process because the Nunavut
Wildlife Management Board won't recommend new quotas for Nunavut's 10 polar
bear zones until all the MOUs are signed off by local and regional hunters associations.
Quotas for the annual polar bear hunt in Nunavut are likely to increase in
2005, as Inuit Qaujimatuqangit will be used as a basis for the new management
plans.
The MOUs will recommend quotas based on scientific numbers for the first six
years after a population survey and IQ for the following eight years.
The new management plan recommends that Iqaluit's allotment of 18 polar bears
within the Davis Strait zone should increase by three to five bears.
But Iqaluit's quota is harder and harder to share among the 2,600-plus people
with Inuit hunting rights in Iqaluit and the small increase isn't enough,
according to the HTO.
"But it's not just the numbers. There wasn't enough IQ in it," said
Amarok HTO president Michael Qappiq. "The proposal was very similar to
the old one."
Nunavut's MOUs were supposed to be ready for the NWMB's board meeting in September.
Once the MOUs are signed off by the local and regional HTOs and the GN, these
"records of consultations" go to the NWMB, which refers its recommendations
to the GN's minister of the environment for final approval.
Delays in the MOU process, which has already been going on for more than three
years, are particularly frustrating for hunters in other communities
such as Panniqtuuq and Kimmirut who share the Davis Strait zone with Iqaluit
- or in North Baffin where the polar bear population is booming because no zone
sees an increase until all the MOUs are approved.
The MOUs are important because Nunavut has a U.S.-approved sports polar bear
hunt.
Under the U.S. Marine Mammal Protection Act, bear skins and trophies may only
be imported from areas of Canada that have healthy bear populations and a sustainable
hunt - and can prove it to the U.S. authorities' satisfaction.
In the case of the two other hold-out communities, Cambridge Bay and Gjoa Haven,
only three bears are up for harvest every year from the depleted M'Clintock
Channel at least for the next six years.
"I wouldn't say they're far apart, but when the bears are in such short
supply, even one makes a difference," said Mitch Taylor, a polar bear biologist
with Nunavut's department of the environment. "People are agreed on the
three, but it's how to share those three."
Taloyoak, which also has access to the M'Clintock Channel stock, is turning
to the Boothia Bay zone for its polar bears and its HTO has agreed not to hunt
any bears from the M'Clintock Channel.
The hunt in the M'Clintock Channel, which averaged 22 to 38 bears a year during
the 1990s, ended abruptly in 2001.
That's when the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service stopped issuing permits for
sports-hunted polar bear trophies from the M'Clintock Channel into the U.S.
for any bears hunted after May 31, 2000. The NWMB and the GN followed up with
a moratorium on polar bear hunting in the M'Clintock Channel.
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