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DS Richardson July 25 2005 097

Study Area
The study area lies in the northern Richardson Mountains (67º 30' - 68º 30' N, 135º 30' - 137º W), at the northwest corner of the Gwich’in Settlement Area, close to the Yukon border. This mountainous region is characterized by 1,250 m peaks and plateaus interspersed with 300 m valleys. Large mammals in the study area include Dall's sheep, Porcupine caribou, moose, muskoxen, grizzly bears, wolves, lynx (
Lynx canadensis), red fox (Vulpes vulpes), and wolverines (Gulo gulo). Subsistence harvest of Dall’s sheep and wolves occurs on both sides of the border (Northwest and Yukon Territories), and two resident sheep tags are distributed annually by the Yukon government since 2004. An interjurisdictional management plan for the sheep population is currently being drafted. Traditionally, Gwich’in people would not hunt bears, except in rare occasions (Bullock 1987). In the last few years, however, there has been an increasing interest to do so, and grizzly bear harvest in the Richardson Mountains is now restricted to a triennial quota of 12 bears in the Gwich’in Settlement Area (divided between southern and northern regions; Grizzly Bear Management Agreement in the Gwich’in Settlement Area 2000) and 12 bears in the Inuvialuit Settlement Region (Inuvialuit Game Council, Hunters and Trappers Committee, personal comm..). The Richardson Mountains are recognized for their rich biodiversity, conservation and cultural significance (Gwich’in Land Use Planning Board 2003).


location study area III