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Baffin Island caribou hunting moratorium to begin Jan. 1

The Nunavut government has placed a moratorium on the hunting of Baffin Island caribou beginning on January 1. This is an urgent situation, says Environment Minister Johnny Mike.

This is an urgent situation, says Environment Minister Johnny Mike

Caribou in Makkovik, Labrador. The animals were once plentiful on Baffin Island, but in the last 15 years, they've largely disappeared. (Submitted by Reubin Nochasak)

The Government of Nunavut has placed a moratorium on the hunting of Baffin Island caribou beginning January 1 the first such moratorium on that population.

Nunavut Environment Minister Johnny Mike. 'This is an urgent situation.' (Courtesy Johnny Mike)
This is an urgent situation, says Environment Minister Johnny Mike in a news release. The GN is taking immediate measures to protect the sustainability of Baffin Island caribou.

An aerial survey in 2012 the first ever of its scale found onlyabout 5,000 caribou on Baffin Island, a decrease of up to 95 per cent of population estimates in the 1990s.

Respecting this interim moratorium is necessary so that Baffin Island caribou can repopulate, says Mike,who had earlier saidhe would not support a total ban on hunting.

Largely disappeared

Once plentiful, Baffin Island caribou have largely disappeared in the last 15 years.

The Environment department blames the natural cycle of the animals as well as increased harvesting pressure, due both to population growth and the increased reach of snowmobiles.

Under the Nunavut Land Claim, the Environment Minister has the right to make interim decisions about wildlife harvesting in urgent and unusual circumstances.

The government says the hunting ban will stay in place until further notice.

Mikesays the government is working with organizations, hunters and communities to come up with a co-management plan.

The Nunavut Wildlife Management Board plans to hold a public hearing in the spring to determine what recommendations to make to the Minister about long-term harvesting limitations.

'Short-term pain, long-term gain'

A government backgrounder released Friday describes the moratorium as short-term pain for long-term gain.

"If we do not stop hunting now, the effects will be permanent, the backgrounder reads.There will be no more caribou on Baffin Island and Inuit culture will be even more impacted."

The moratorium follows a major meeting of caribou partners in late November in Iqaluit.

The government says no compensation for loss of income is expected, pointing out that there have been too few caribou in recent years to provide meaningful sustenance to more than a handful of people.

The Baffin Island caribou population is plummeting at the same time as theherdon Nunavut's Southampton Island, theBathurst and Bluenose East herds in the Northwest Territories, and the George River caribou herd in Northern Quebec and Labrador.

The island-wide moratorium begins Jan. 1 and will go on indefinitely. (Nunavut government)