On an Alaskan island, a mayor fights for fur seals - and a new future
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[July 12, 2021]
By Matthew Green and Nathan Howard
ST. GEORGE ISLAND, Alaska (Reuters) - Fifty
years ago, Patrick Pletnikoff spent his summers stripping blubber from
the carcasses of seals clubbed to death in Alaska's annual harvest,
competing with other young men to show who wielded the fastest blade.
Now he's fighting for a bigger prize: to transform his native St. George
Island's fortunes and protect dwindling colonies of northern fur seals
by creating Alaska's first marine sanctuary in the surrounding waters -
a move that would empower local people to limit fishing for the seals'
prey.
Commercial sealing was once the lifeblood of St. George, a treeless
speck of volcanic rock far from the U.S. mainland. But the indigenous
Unangan community has struggled to find a new niche in the decades since
the trade was banned, and there are now less than 60 inhabitants left.
As the long-serving mayor, Pletnikoff has spent years lobbying the
federal government to add St. George to the network of 15 U.S. marine
sanctuaries, hoping that a designation will kick-start a new
"conservation economy" based on eco-tourism, scientific research and
sustainable fishing.
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With President Joe Biden pledging to expand ocean protections,
Pletnikoff believes his dream of placing his fog-shrouded home on a par
with sanctuaries such as California's Monterey Bay or the Florida Keys
may finally be within reach.
"It could be a new beginning," Pletnikoff, 73, said of his plan for St.
George, which along with neighbouring St. Paul is sometimes referred to
as the "Galapagos of the north" for its role as a haven for wildlife in
the northern Pacific.
"We'll look at this holistically, and try to understand what our
responsibilities are: Not only to ourselves, but to our environment and
the animal kingdom as well," he said.
With climate change also affecting the surrounding Bering Sea, where sea
ice in recent winters has hit its lowest level in millennia , advocates
say the proposal could ease pressure on seals by allowing islanders to
regulate industrial trawling of the walleye pollock that the species
depends upon for food.
Establishing a sanctuary could also help right historic wrongs,
Pletnikoff added.
Generations of his Unangan ancestors worked in harsh conditions in the
sealing trade, run first by Russian explorers and then the U.S.
government. The lingering sense of exploitation is evoked in a
contemporary folk song called "Slaves of the Harvest".
Now, the National Marine Sanctuaries program, run by the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), aims to give local people
more autonomy to manage designated waters - including powers to control
fishing.
With the Bering Sea considered one of the most lucrative and
rigorously-monitored fisheries in the world, plied by vessels sailing
2,000 miles from Seattle to drag their nets off St. George, fishermen
are wary.
The industry says the area is already sustainably managed by the North
Pacific Fishery Management Council, an advisory body that sets quotas in
consultation with fishermen, Alaskan communities and scientists.
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"Limiting or taking their regulatory power away in an area with no
scientifically based challenges is a solution in search of a problem,"
said Gavin Gibbons, spokesman for the National Fisheries Institute
industry group.
BLEAK BUT BEAUTIFUL
As a boy, Pletnikoff would hike with his father across the island's
unforgiving landscape, learning to hunt and fish. His eyes tear up at
the thought that his people's knowledge of St. George's seals, Steller
sea lions and seabirds could be lost.
Nevertheless, on one level, the mayor has succeeded in bringing
sanctuary status closer.
In December, a congressional committee requested NOAA begin designating
five sanctuary nominations it already had accepted for formal
consideration, including the proposal from St. George which Pletnikoff
submitted in October, 2016.
In April, Biden proposed a record $6.9 billion budget for NOAA, with
funds earmarked for the designations that also include a proposed
Chumash Heritage sanctuary off California, Pennsylvania's Lake Erie
Quadrangle, the Atlantic's Hudson Canyon and the Mariana Trench in the
western Pacific.
Biden's emphasis on indigenous stewardship in his goal of protecting 30%
of U.S. land and sea by 2030 could also play in Plentikoff's favour.
"More and more, federal officials are recognizing that tribes need to be
more in the driving seat when it comes to land or environmental issues,"
said Raina Thiele, co-chair of Biden's Native American Policy Committee.
But establishing a sanctuary can take years, as NOAA launches rounds of
public consultation, develops management plans and seeks approvals from
politicians.
With St. George's proposal lacking a champion in Alaska's state
government or its Congressional delegation, which is comprised of
Republicans, there is no guarantee it will move forward any time soon.
Lashed by thunderstorms and a corrosive sea breeze, the dilapidated
facades of the island's timber houses suggest time may be short for the
mayor to reverse the decline.
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Fur seals rest along the northern shore in St. George, Alaska, U.S.,
May 22, 2021. Hundreds of thousands of fur seals spend their summer
on St George each year. REUTERS/Nathan Howard
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Nearby, spectacular thousand-foot cliffs provide
nesting sites for the bulk of the world's population of red-legged
kittiwakes, a species in the gull family, while auklets, puffins and
guillemots also thrive.
But it is the northern fur seals performing lazy
barrel rolls in the surf, or playfully grappling each other with
their flippers, that are closest to Pletnikoff's heart.
LEGACY OF SERVITUDE
St. George takes its name from a Russian sloop that made landfall on
the then-uninhabited island in June, 1786 by following seals through
fog.
The Russians lost little time in rounding up Unangan people from the
Aleutian island chain some 220 miles (355 km) to the south to
harvest and skin the seals. For much of the 19th century, the
activity was Alaska's most profitable industry.
Passing under U.S. control following the purchase of Alaska in 1867,
commercial sealing remained the foundation of the local economy
until it was banned in St. George and St. Paul, the main islands in
the Pribilof chain, in 1973 and 1984 respectively.
The trade cast a long shadow: federal overseers once dictated almost
every aspect of life on the islands, including whom Unangan workers
could marry, historians say.
The system came to national attention only after more than 800
Pribilof and Aleutian islanders were interned on the Alaska mainland
in terrible conditions during World War Two. Several of Pletnikoff's
family members were among the 10% who died.
Since sealing has wound down, St. George's population has fallen by
about 75% from its peak of 250 in the early 1960s. Four years ago,
the only school closed.
Meanwhile, northern fur seals have declined. On St. George and St.
Paul, their main breeding grounds, numbers have fallen to about
459,000 from 2.1 million in the 1950s, according to NOAA estimates.
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On the uninhabited Bogoslof Island to the south, however, northern
fur seal numbers have increased from almost none 30 years ago to
about 161,000.
Researchers have spent years considering possible factors at play:
from disturbance by ships and entanglement in fishing gear to
pollution, predation by killer whales and climate change.
In December, an analysis of northern fur seal diets published
in Frontiers in Marine Science found that previous studies may have
"vastly underestimated" the amount of commercially-valuable walleye
pollock consumed by the species.
Although scientists do not know how much impact fishing might be
having on seal numbers today, Pletnikoff saw the paper as
vindication of what he had long suspected: large trawlers are
competing directly for the animals' prey.
Not everyone believes that a sanctuary would bring tangible
benefits.
Some question how many tourists would risk being stranded when fog
grounds flights. Others fear changes to today's management system
might hamper prospects for generating local fishing jobs.
"The benefits of a sanctuary beyond the conservation measures and
public forum that are already supported through this existing
regulatory framework are unclear," said Luke Fanning, chief
executive of the non-profit Aleutian Pribilof Island Community
Development Association, which supports a small-scale halibut
fishing program in St. George.
Nevertheless, with American and European seabird biologists who have
fond memories of field trips to St. George backing his plan ,
Pletnikoff hopes a sanctuary designation could spur the creation of
a permanent research station.
His vision: to combine modern science with ancestral knowledge to
find ways to buffer seals and other wildlife from the challenges
ahead.
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"Generations of Unangan people, including my younger brothers and
sisters, grew up with knowing nothing more than fur seals and
seabirds – and knowing our environment," he said. "We don't want to
see that destroyed."
(Nathan Howard Reported from St George and Matthew Green reported
from London; additional reporting by Yereth Rosen in Anchorage and
Valerice Volcovici in Washington; writing by Matthew Green; Editing
by Mike Collett-White)
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