January 11, 2002
Beluga hunt will exceed
new increased limits
Some communities exceeded
yearly allowable catch from the start
JANE
GEORGE
MONTREAL Preliminary
numbers for the 2001 beluga harvest reveal a growing hunger for the sweet taste
of muktuk in Nunavik.
Nunaviks new beluga
management plan, which was negotiated last spring, increased the regions
total allowable beluga harvest to 370 from 290 animals.
But the final number of
beluga actually killed in Nunavik in 2001 will exceed even this new, higher
figure.
Preliminary figures furnished
by the federal department of fisheries and oceans indicate that 371 beluga were
killed in Nunavik in 2001. While thats just one more animal than the plan
allows, several communities exceeded their limits. And even these figures may
be inaccurate due to under-reporting.
For example, the reported
harvest in the beluga-rich community of Ivujivik was 13 animals an unbelievably
low number.
Hunters in Ivujivik, Salluit,
Kangiqsujuaq and Quaqtaq are supposed to limit their catch to 30 beluga each
five more than in the past.
But even before the official
start date of the 2001 season, hunters in Quaqtaq had killed 37 beluga, while
in Salluit they had landed 43. This meant these two Hudson Strait communities
had exceeded their yearly allowable catch from the start.
At the end of the beluga
season, Quaqtaq, a community that had opposed the terms of the new management
plan, reported killing 59 animals, and Salluit had reported 54.
While the previous beluga
management plan set a limit of 18 beluga in communities along the Eastern Hudson
Bay, and 10 in communities along the Ungava Bay, the new plan now gives these
communities 25 beluga each.
But in 2001, Akulivik reported
a harvest of 32 animals and Puvirnituq 49.
Only communities along
the Ungava Bay kept within their limits, reporting a catch of less than 25 beluga
each.
According to the new beluga
management plan, communities were also to establish a code of conduct, educate
hunters and co-operate with fishery guardians and scientists in the reporting
and sampling of kills.
However, at the December
meeting of the KRG council, several councillors said sampling was down, due
to the difficulty of getting sampling kits. Others complained that boozing had
gone on during the beluga hunt.
And theres still
no agreement about how many beluga there are. Many Nunavimmiut doubt the results
of aerial surveys that show depleted numbers of beluga along the Eastern Hudson
Bay and Ungava Bay coasts.
"They cant see
what we can see," said Sarollie Weetaluktuk, a municipal councillor from
Inukjuak.
Yet, in 2001, when hunters
reported sightings of beluga, even their numbers showed enormous differences.
In Kuujjuaraapik, 2,160
beluga were sighted, while in neighbouring Umiujaq only 300 were seen.
In Kangiqsujuaq, hunters
reported seeing 2,876 beluga, while in Ivujivik, a place well-known for its
hordes of migrating beluga, hunters said they saw only 53 animals.
Only a few hundred beluga
were sighted in the Ungava Bay, reflecting the low population numbers usually
cited by wildlife biologists.
DFO official Michel Tremblay
admitted there is still a "large gap" between how the scientists and
hunters think population surveys should be conducted and how they see the beluga
stocks health.
"Everyone wants to
have a beluga hunt, but the species needs to be protected. Every time we come
out with reduced population figures or limits, people are unhappy," Tremblay
said.
He added that the commitment
to conserve beluga stocks should come from the communities.
To encourage sound management
of the Nunaviks beluga stock, regional and federal officials want to organize
a tour this winter by elders who would share traditional knowledge about beluga.
"We will use their
knowledge and learn from them what their experiences were," said Sandy
Gordon, head of the Kativik Regional Governments renewable resources department.
This tour would also be
a way to bring the regions beluga management plan back on track before
the 2002 season starts in late June.
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