US Alaska to resume ‘barbaric’ shooting of bears and wolves from helicopters

Alaska is set to resume the aerial gunning of bears and wolves as a population control measure aimed at boosting caribou and moose herd numbers, even as the state’s own evaluation of the practice cast doubt on its effectiveness.

The renewed program would allow hunters to eliminate up to 80% of the animals on 20,000 acres of state land. Environmental groups opposed to what they label a “barbaric” practice of shooting wildlife from helicopters is more about sport than scientific practice in part because hunters want caribou populations to increase because they are trophy animals.

“Alaska’s practice of indiscriminately strafing predators is both inhumane and inane,” said Rick Steiner, a former University of Alaska-Fairbanks ecologist now with Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (Peer), which opposes the practice. “There is no scientific evidence that this carnage will boost populations of moose and caribou, and there is a growing body of evidence that it disrupts a healthy predator/prey balance in the wild.”

The report comes after the Biden administration effectively upheld Trump era rules that allowed for other inhumane hunting practices on federal lands in Alaska, like killing cubs in dens.

Alaska’s “intensive management” allows Alaskan game agents to kill any brown bear, black bear or wolf on some state lands. Nearly 100 bears, including 20 cubs, were killed by helicopter in 2023.

The latest program would allow aerial hunters to kill 80% of wolves (until the population is reduced to 35), 80% of black bears (until the population is reduced to 700) and 60% brown bears (until the population is reduced to 375).

Though the practice’s supporters say eliminating the predators helps boost sagging caribou populations, an October state report that examined predator kill practices came to a different conclusion.

“The goal of the project was to increase caribou calf survival by removing all bears and wolves from the calving grounds,” the report reads. “Data does not exist to evaluate whether the goal was achieved.”

The largest factors in caribou herd decline were “disease, nutrition, and winter severity”, the report states. About 65% died from starvation or dehydration.

Critics say the state also notes that it doesn’t know the practices’ full impact on bear populations because it did not estimate brown bear numbers before allowing the kills. More than half of the brown bears killed in 2024 were adult females, raising further questions about the population’s ability to rebound.

Meanwhile, the state refuses to allow photographs of the slaughter, independent observers to be present, or to subject the program to scientific review by the federal government.

The practice has had other consequences: The National Park Service has ended a more than 20-year study of wolf behavior in the nearby Yukon-Charley National Preserve because the resident wolf population has fallen so low.

Meanwhile, it has reduced tourism in the area because the ability of visitors to view intact wolf packs inside adjacent Denali National Park, one of the state’s major tourist draws, has plummeted. The state has said the hunting program raises revenue from hunters, but critics called it the “epitome of pound foolish”.

“The amount of tourist dollars from people seeking to view these predators in the wild dwarfs any incremental increase in hunting fee revenue the state hopes to realize,” said Peer executive director Tim Whitehouse.

source: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jan/20/alaska-aerial-gunning-bears-wolves
archive: https://archive.md/7tSZf
 
“The amount of tourist dollars from people seeking to view these predators in the wild dwarfs any incremental increase in hunting fee revenue the state hopes to realize,” said Peer executive director Tim Whitehouse.
This is basically the entire purpose of the cull. They're trying to justify handing out more hunting licenses for caribou. The Alaskan wilderness is already in a state of ecological balance, and this is greatly upsetting to sportshunters who want to bag caribou. Must cull the apex predators so that later you can claim the caribou herds must also be culled.
 
This is basically the entire purpose of the cull. They're trying to justify handing out more hunting licenses for caribou. The Alaskan wilderness is already in a state of ecological balance, and this is greatly upsetting to sportshunters who want to bag caribou. Must cull the apex predators so that later you can claim the caribou herds must also be culled.
I thought hunters were supposed to be the biggest advocates for the ecosystem? You’re telling me they’re just dirty rats?
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I thought hunters were supposed to be the biggest advocates for the ecosystem? You’re telling me they’re just dirty rats?
:lossmanjack:
This just in. Farmers seek to cull pigs to harvest meat. Pigs astounded that farmers expected to extract gain from expending effort.

But yes, there's a large hunting and ranching interest to treat the wilderness like an open air farm. In western states, it's supported by ranching interests who want to use federal and state land to graze their animals without having to fend off the wildlife. Ranchers get grazing rights on public land for a song and are the first to moan about nature existing on public lands. And yes, all of this is handed out at well below market rates. Welfare ranchers complain that the welfare wasn't enough welfare. I expect no less from welfare hunters who think millions of acres of public land should be used for their benefit as a welfare hunting reserve. What's private is private, but what's public is also private when it's convenient, and it better be handed out on the cheap or they'll whine about being oppressed. These special interests would shut up real fast if they were charged private rates for resources consumed.

See also Californian farmers (hello oligarchs using 20% of the state's water a year on nut farming) whining about water shortages while creating the water shortages and hoarding it through asinine water rights. Public resources are always ripe for the taking when you can convince the government to give it away for almost free.
 
lmao this is so goddamn dumb, even for the Guardian. I imagine some wanker in London or faggot in NYC wrote this trash.

First, do you know why the use helicopters? Because it's a big fucking state; you cut it in half and it would still be bigger than Texas. It's not like you can your pickup truck down a gravel road in like 98% of the state to find bears and wolves. Second, OMG Trump obligatory mention in the forth paragraph. Third, this "journalist" doesn't mention ANILCA (thank pres carter you faggot) or understand the relationship to this. Fourth, this is just trash and Rick Steiner is a retired state employee who Got His Pension So Fuck All of You.

In summation, stop the killing of animals and go after journalists who write this trash.

e: The report in the first line in the article references the MCH, which is the Mulchatna Caribou Herd, which is in the Mulchatna river drainage (no shit) and it's 530 miles from the nearest portion, roughly, to the Charley-Yukon National Preserve. Wolves and moose and caribou in each area, or lack thereof, have absolutely ZERO interaction. goddamn this article sucks.
 
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Something something second amendment: the right to arm bears.
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This latest season of Yogi Bear is quickly devolving into Squirrel and Hedgehog level story telling.
 
anyone who shoots bears from a helicopter isn't a hunter, they're just a fucking pussy.

It's not hunting. It's state biologist shooting animals to to keep things in check. It's not "sporting", agreed, but this is utilitarian. There's no roads where this goes on; helicopters are the most efficient option. Nobody is going to pose with the dead animals or eat them or whatever. Before you get all mad, where this takes place is where small, isolated native villages get the bulk of their non-fish protein that they've done for a long ass time. So if there's nothing for them to hunt, well, enjoy paying for food stamps. Nobody gives a fuck about hunters or tourists.
 
Hey we should strap rocket pods to the choppers and run CAS attacks on em brown bears
 
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