[Federal Register: December 27, 2007 (Volume 72, Number 247)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Page 73425-73482]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr27de07-13]
[[Page 73425]]
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Part II
Department of Agriculture
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Forest Service
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36 CFR Part 242
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Department of the Interior
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Fish and Wildlife Service
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50 CFR Part 100
Subsistence Management Regulations for Public Lands in Alaska, Subpart
C and Subpart D--2007-08 Subsistence Taking of Wildlife Regulations;
2007-08 Subsistence Taking of Fish on the Kenai Peninsula Regulations;
Final Rule
[[Page 73426]]
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DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
Forest Service
36 CFR Part 242
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
Fish and Wildlife Service
50 CFR Part 100
RIN 1018-AU15
Subsistence Management Regulations for Public Lands in Alaska,
Subpart C and Subpart D--2007-08 Subsistence Taking of Wildlife
Regulations; 2007-08 Subsistence Taking of Fish on the Kenai Peninsula
Regulations
AGENCIES: Forest Service, Agriculture; Fish and Wildlife Service,
Interior.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: This final rule establishes regulations for seasons, harvest
limits, methods, and means related to taking of wildlife for
subsistence uses in Alaska during the 2007-08 regulatory year. The
rulemaking is necessary because the regulations governing the
subsistence harvest of wildlife in Alaska are subject to an annual
public review cycle. This rulemaking replaces the wildlife regulations
that expired on June 30, 2007. This rule also amends the regulations
that establish which Alaska residents are eligible to take specific
species for subsistence uses. In addition, this rule revises the
regulations for fishing seasons, harvest limits, methods and means
related to taking of fish on the Kenai Peninsula for subsistence uses
during the 2007-08 regulatory year. This rule also amends the customary
and traditional use determinations of the Federal Subsistence Board.
DATES: This rule is effective December 27, 2007. Compliance with Sec.
----.24(a)(1) was required as of July 1, 2007; compliance with Sec. --
--.24(a)(2) was required as of April 1, 2007; compliance with Sec. --
--.25 was required as of July 1, 2007; compliance with Sec. ----.26 is
required from July 1, 2007, through June 30, 2008; and compliance with
Sec. ----.27(i)(10) is required from June 11, 2007, through March 31,
2008.
ADDRESSES: The Board meeting transcripts are available for review at
the Office of Subsistence Management, 3601 C Street, Suite 1030,
Anchorage, AK, or on the Office of Subsistence Management Web site
(http://alaska.fws.gov/asm/home.html).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Chair, Federal Subsistence Board, c/o
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Attention: Peter J. Probasco, Office of
Subsistence Management; (907) 786-3888. For questions specific to
National Forest System lands, contact Steve Kessler, Subsistence
Program Leader, USDA, Forest Service, Alaska Region, (907) 786-3888.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background
In Title VIII of the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation
Act (ANILCA) (16 U.S.C. 3111-3126), Congress found that ``the situation
in Alaska is unique in that, in most cases, no practical alternative
means are available to replace the food supplies and other items
gathered from fish and wildlife which supply rural residents dependent
on subsistence uses * * *'' and that ``continuation of the opportunity
for subsistence uses of resources on public and other lands in Alaska
is threatened * * *''. As a result, Title VIII requires, among other
things, that the Secretary of the Interior and the Secretary of
Agriculture (Secretaries) implement a joint program to grant a
preference for subsistence uses of fish and wildlife resources on
Federal public lands and waters in Alaska, unless the State of Alaska
enacts and implements laws of general applicability that are consistent
with ANILCA and that provide for the subsistence definition,
preference, and participation specified in Sections 803, 804, and 805
of ANILCA.
The State implemented a program that the Department of the Interior
previously found to be consistent with ANILCA. However, in December
1989, the Alaska Supreme Court ruled in McDowell v. State of Alaska
that the rural preference in the State subsistence statute violated the
Alaska Constitution. The Court's ruling in McDowell required the State
to delete the rural preference from its subsistence statute and,
therefore, negated State compliance with ANILCA. The Court stayed the
effect of the decision until July 1, 1990.
As a result of the McDowell decision, on July 1, 1990, the
Department of the Interior and the Department of Agriculture
(Departments) assumed responsibility for implementation of Title VIII
of ANILCA on public lands and waters. In anticipation of carrying out
this responsibility, the Departments published temporary subsistence
management regulations for public lands in Alaska in the Federal
Register on June 29, 1990 (55 FR 27114). Because the State was unable
to create a program in compliance with Title VIII, the Departments
published final regulations in the Federal Register in 1992 (57 FR
22940, May 29, 1992).
As a result of this joint process between Interior and Agriculture,
these regulations can be found in two titles of the Code of Federal
Regulations (CFR): Title 36, ``Parks, Forests, and Public Property,''
and title 50, ``Wildlife and Fisheries,'' at 36 CFR 242.1-242.28 and 50
CFR 100.1-100.28, respectively. The regulations contain subparts as
follows: Subpart A, General Provisions; subpart B, Program Structure;
subpart C, Board Determinations; and subpart D, Subsistence Taking of
Fish and Wildlife.
Consistent with subparts A, B, and C of these regulations, as
revised December 27, 2005 (70 FR 76400), the Departments established a
Federal Subsistence Board to administer the Federal Subsistence
Management Program. The Board's composition includes
A Chair appointed by the Secretary of the Interior with
concurrence of the Secretary of Agriculture;
The Alaska Regional Director, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service;
The Alaska Regional Director, U.S. National Park Service;
The Alaska State Director, U.S. Bureau of Land Management;
The Alaska Regional Director, U.S. Bureau of Indian
Affairs; and
The Alaska Regional Forester, U.S. Forest Service.
Through the Board, these agencies participate in the development of
regulations for subparts A, B, and C, which set forth the program, and
the subpart D regulations, which are revised annually.
Federal Subsistence Regional Advisory Councils
The Federal subsistence management regulations divide Alaska into
10 subsistence resource regions, each of which is represented by a
Federal Subsistence Regional Advisory Council (Regional Council) (36
CFR 242.11 and 50 CFR 100.11). The Regional Councils provide a forum
for rural residents, who have personal knowledge of local conditions
and resource requirements, to have a meaningful role in the subsistence
management of fish and wildlife on Alaska public lands and waters. The
Regional Council members represent varied geographical, cultural, and
user diversity within each region.
Because the subpart D regulations, which establish seasons and
harvest limits and methods and means, are subject to an annual cycle,
they require development of an entire new rule each year. Customary and
traditional use determinations (subpart C) are subject to an annual
review process providing for modification each year. Section ----.24
(i.e., customary and traditional use
[[Page 73427]]
determinations) was originally published in the Federal Register on May
29, 1992 (57 FR 22940). The regulations at 36 CFR 242.4 and 50 CFR
100.4 define ``customary and traditional use'' as ``a long-established,
consistent pattern of use, incorporating beliefs and customs which have
been transmitted from generation to generation* * *.'' Since that time,
the Board has made a number of customary and traditional use
determinations at the request of impacted subsistence users. Those
modifications, along with some administrative corrections, were
published in the Federal Register as follows:
Modifications to Sec. ----.24.
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Rule made changes to the following provisions of
Federal Register citation Date of publication: ----.24:
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59 FR 27462.......................... May 27, 1994........... Wildlife and Fish/Shellfish.
59 FR 51855.......................... October 13, 1994....... Wildlife and Fish/Shellfish.
60 FR 10317.......................... February 24, 1995...... Wildlife and Fish/Shellfish.
61 FR 39698.......................... July 30, 1996.......... Wildlife and Fish/Shellfish.
62 FR 29016.......................... May 29, 1997........... Wildlife and Fish/Shellfish.
63 FR 35332.......................... June 29, 1998.......... Wildlife and Fish/Shellfish.
63 FR 46148.......................... August 28, 1998........ Wildlife and Fish/Shellfish.
64 FR 1276........................... January 8, 1999........ Fish/Shellfish.
64 FR 35776.......................... July 1, 1999........... Wildlife.
65 FR 40730.......................... June 30, 2000.......... Wildlife.
66 FR 10142.......................... February 13, 2001...... Fish/Shellfish.
66 FR 33744.......................... June 25, 2001.......... Wildlife.
67 FR 5890........................... February 7, 2002....... Fish/Shellfish.
67 FR 43710.......................... June 28, 2002.......... Wildlife.
68 FR 7276........................... February 12, 2003...... Fish/Shellfish.
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Note: The Board met May 20-22, 2003, but did not make any additional customary and traditional use
determinations.
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69 FR 5018........................... February 3, 2004....... Fish/Shellfish.
69 FR 40174.......................... July 1, 2004........... Wildlife.
70 FR 13377.......................... March 21, 2005......... Fish/Shellfish.
70 FR 36268.......................... June 22, 2005.......... Wildlife.
71 FR 15569.......................... March 29, 2006......... Fish/Shellfish.
71 FR 37642.......................... June 30, 2006.......... Wildlife.
72 FR 12676.......................... March 16, 2007......... Fish/Shellfish.
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Current Rule
The Departments published a proposed rule on August 14, 2006 (71 FR
46423), to amend subparts C and D of 36 CFR part 242 and 50 CFR part
100. The proposed rule opened a comment period, which closed on October
20, 2006. The Departments advertised the proposed rule by mail, radio,
and newspaper. During that period, the Regional Councils met and, in
addition to other Regional Council business, received suggestions for
proposals from the public. The Board received a total of 64 proposals
for changes to subparts C and D. After the proposal period closed, the
Board prepared two booklets describing the proposals and distributed
them to the public. One booklet was for wildlife proposals Statewide,
and the other was for fish proposals for the Kenai Peninsula; both were
also available online. The public then had an additional 30 days in
which to comment on the proposals for changes to the regulations.
The 10 Regional Councils met again, received public comments, and
formulated their recommendations to the Board on proposals for their
respective regions. The Regional Councils had a substantial role in
reviewing the proposed rule and making recommendations for the final
rule. Moreover, a Council Chair, or a designated representative,
presented each Council's recommendations at the Board meetings of April
30-May 2, 2007 and May 8-10, 2007. These final regulations reflect
Board review and consideration of Regional Council recommendations and
public comments. The public has had extensive opportunity to review and
comment on all changes.
Of the 64 proposals, the Board adopted 18 and rejected 14. The
Board adopted 20 proposals with modifications and took no action on 8
proposals due to action that they had taken on other similar proposals.
The Board deferred two proposals to allow collection of additional
information. One proposal had been withdrawn by the proponent prior to
the meeting, and one proposal was withdrawn during the meeting at the
request of the proponent and with the concurrence of the Chair of the
Regional Council and Board members.
Summary of Proposals Rejected by the Board
The Board rejected or took no action on 23 proposals.
All of the rejected proposals were recommended for rejection by at
least one of the Regional Councils. Detailed information relating to
justification for the action on each proposal may be found in the Board
meeting transcripts, available for review at the Office of Subsistence
Management, 3601 C Street, Suite 1030, Anchorage, Alaska 99503, or on
the Office of Subsistence Management Web site (http://alaska.fws.gov/asm/home.html
).
Summary of Proposals Adopted by the Board
The Board adopted 38 proposals. Some of these proposals were
adopted as submitted. Others were adopted with modifications suggested
by the respective Regional Council, modifications developed during the
analysis process, or modifications developed during the Board's public
deliberations.
All of the adopted proposals were recommended for adoption by at
least one of the Regional Councils, although further modifications may
have been
[[Page 73428]]
made during Board deliberations, and were based on customary and
traditional uses or harvest practices, or on protecting fish or
wildlife populations. Detailed information relating to justification
for the action on each proposal may be found in the Board meeting
transcripts, available for review at the Office of Subsistence
Management, 3601 C Street, Suite 1030, Anchorage, Alaska 99503, or on
the Office of Subsistence Management Web site (http://alaska.fws.gov/asm/home.html
). Additional minor modifications have been made by
changing titles of officials delegated to open or close seasons or set
harvest restrictions. This was necessary because of office
reorganizations and internal agency changes in official geographic
responsibilities.
One wildlife proposal was adopted by the Board contrary to the
recommendations of the Eastern Interior and North Slope Regional
Advisory Councils. The Board's decision was made in consideration of
Section 815(3) of ANILCA, which allows restricting nonsubsistence uses
only if needed to conserve healthy populations of fish and wildlife, to
continue subsistence uses, for public safety, or for administration.
The Board concluded that maintaining the closure to nonsubsistence
hunting of sheep in the Red Sheep Creek and Cane Creek drainages within
the management area was no longer necessary for conservation of a
healthy sheep population, to provide for continued subsistence use of
sheep, for public safety, or for administration.
These final regulations reflect Board review and consideration of
Regional Council recommendations and public comments. All Board members
have reviewed this rule and agree with its substance. Because this rule
concerns public lands managed by an agency or agencies in both the
Departments of Agriculture and the Interior, identical text will be
incorporated into 36 CFR part 242 and 50 CFR part 100.
Conformance With Statutory and Regulatory Authorities
Administrative Procedure Act Compliance
The Board has provided extensive opportunity for public input and
involvement in excess of standard Administrative Procedure Act
requirements, including participation in multiple Regional Council
meetings, additional public review and comment on all proposals for
regulatory change, and opportunity for additional public comment during
the Board meeting prior to deliberation. Additionally, an
administrative mechanism exists (and has been used by the public) to
request reconsideration of the Board's decision on any particular
proposal for regulatory change.
In the more than 15 years the Program has been operating, no
benefit to the public has been demonstrated by delaying the effective
date of the subsistence regulations. A further lapse in regulatory
control could affect the continued viability of wildlife populations
and future subsistence opportunities for rural Alaskans, and would
generally fail to serve the overall public interest. Therefore, the
Board finds good cause pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 553(d) to make this rule
effective upon publication in the Federal Register. We further believe
that sufficient public notice has been given to affected persons about
the Board decisions, and we have established the compliance dates set
forth in dates to ensure continued operation of the subsistence
program.
National Environmental Policy Act Compliance
A Draft Environmental Impact Statement (DEIS) for developing a
Federal Subsistence Management Program was distributed for public
comment on October 7, 1991. That document described the major issues
associated with Federal subsistence management as identified through
public meetings, written comments, and staff analyses and examined the
environmental consequences of four alternatives. Proposed regulations
(subparts A, B, and C) that would implement the preferred alternative
were included in the DEIS as an appendix. The DEIS and the proposed
administrative regulations presented a framework for an annual
regulatory cycle regarding subsistence hunting and fishing regulations
(subpart D). The Final Environmental Impact Statement (FEIS) was
published on February 28, 1992.
Based on the public comments received, the analysis contained in
the FEIS, and the recommendations of the Federal Subsistence Board and
the Department of the Interior's Subsistence Policy Group, the
Secretary of the Interior, with the concurrence of the Secretary of
Agriculture, through the U.S. Department of Agriculture--Forest
Service, implemented Alternative IV as identified in the DEIS and FEIS
(Record of Decision on Subsistence Management for Federal Public Lands
in Alaska (ROD), signed April 6, 1992). The DEIS and the selected
alternative in the FEIS defined the administrative framework of an
annual regulatory cycle for subsistence hunting and fishing
regulations. The final rule for subsistence management regulations for
public lands in Alaska, subparts A, B, and C, implemented the Federal
Subsistence Management Program and included a framework for an annual
cycle for subsistence hunting and fishing regulations. The following
Federal Register documents pertain to this rulemaking:
Subsistence Management Regulations for Public Lands in Alaska, Subparts A, B, and C: Federal Register Documents
Pertaining to the Final Rule
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Federal Register citation Date of publication Category Details
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
57 FR 22940........................ May 29, 1992.......... Final Rule............ ``Subsistence Management
Regulations for Public
Lands in Alaska; Final
Rule'' was published in
the Federal Register.
64 FR 1276......................... January 8, 1999....... Final Rule............ Amended the regulations to
include subsistence
activities occurring on
inland navigable waters in
which the United States
has a reserved water right
and to identify specific
Federal land units where
reserved water rights
exist. Extended the
Federal Subsistence
Board's management to all
Federal lands selected
under the Alaska Native
Claims Settlement Act and
the Alaska Statehood Act
and situated within the
boundaries of a
Conservation System Unit,
National Recreation Area,
National Conservation
Area, or any new national
forest or forest addition,
until conveyed to the
State of Alaska or to an
Alaska Native Corporation.
Specified and clarified
the Secretaries' authority
to determine when hunting,
fishing, or trapping
activities taking place in
Alaska off the public
lands interfere with the
subsistence priority.
[[Page 73429]]
66 FR 31533........................ June 12, 2001......... Interim Rule.......... Expanded the authority that
the Board may delegate to
agency field officials and
clarified the procedures
for enacting emergency or
temporary restrictions,
closures, or openings.
67 FR 30559........................ May 7, 2002........... Final Rule............ Amended the operating
regulations in response to
comments on the June 12,
2001, interim rule. Also
corrected some inadvertent
errors and oversights of
previous rules.
68 FR 7703......................... February 18, 2003..... Direct Final Rule..... Clarified how old a person
must be to receive certain
subsistence use permits
and removed the
requirement that Regional
Councils must have an odd
number of members.
68 FR 23035........................ April 30, 2003........ Affirmation of Direct Because we received no
Final Rule. adverse comments on the
direct final rule (67 FR
30559), we adopted the
direct final rule.
69 FR 60957........................ October 14, 2004...... Final Rule............ Clarified the membership
qualifications for
Regional Advisory Council
membership and relocated
the definition of
``regulatory year'' from
subpart A to subpart D of
the regulations.
70 FR 76400........................ December 27, 2005..... Final Rule............ Revised jurisdiction in
marine waters and
clarified jurisdiction
relative to military
lands.
71 FR 49997........................ August 24, 2006....... Final Rule............ Revised the jurisdiction of
the subsistence program by
adding submerged lands and
waters in the area of
Makhnati Island, near
Sitka, AK. This allowed
subsistence users to
harvest marine resources
in this area under
seasons, harvest limits,
and methods specified in
the regulations.
72 FR 25688........................ May 7, 2007........... Final Rule............ Revised nonrural
determinations.
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An environmental assessment was prepared in 1997 on the expansion
of Federal jurisdiction over fisheries and is available from the office
listed under FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT. The Secretary of the
Interior with the concurrence of the Secretary of Agriculture
determined that the expansion of Federal jurisdiction did not
constitute a major Federal action significantly affecting the human
environment and, therefore, signed a Finding of No Significant Impact.
Compliance With Section 810 of ANILCA
The intent of all Federal subsistence regulations is to accord
subsistence uses of fish and wildlife on public lands a priority over
the taking of fish and wildlife on such lands for other purposes,
unless restriction is necessary to conserve healthy fish and wildlife
populations. A Section 810 analysis was completed as part of the FEIS
process. The final Section 810 analysis determination appeared in the
April 6, 1992, ROD, which concluded that the Federal Subsistence
Management Program may have some local impacts on subsistence uses, but
the program is not likely to significantly restrict subsistence uses.
Paperwork Reduction Act
This rule does not contain any new information collection
requirements that need Office of Management and Budget (OMB) approval
under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
This rule applies to the use of public lands in Alaska. The information
collection requirements described in this rule are already approved by
OMB and have been assigned control number 1018-0075, which expires
October 31, 2009. We may not conduct or sponsor and you are not
required to respond to a collection of information request unless it
displays a currently valid OMB control number.
Other Requirements
Economic Effects--This rule is not a significant rule subject to
OMB review under Executive Order 12866. This rulemaking will impose no
significant costs on small entities; this rule does not restrict any
existing sport, commercial fishery, hunting and trapping on the public
lands, and subsistence fisheries will continue at essentially the same
levels as they presently occur. The number of businesses and the amount
of trade that will result from this Federal land-related activity is
unknown but expected to be insignificant.
The Regulatory Flexibility Act of 1980 (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.)
requires preparation of regulatory flexibility analyses for rules that
will have a significant economic effect on a substantial number of
small entities, which include small businesses, organizations, or
governmental jurisdictions. The Departments have determined that this
rulemaking will not have a significant economic effect on a substantial
number of small entities within the meaning of the Regulatory
Flexibility Act.
This rulemaking will impose no significant costs on small entities;
the exact number of businesses and the amount of trade that will result
from this Federal land-related activity is unknown. The aggregate
effect is an insignificant positive economic effect on a number of
small entities, such as sporting goods, ammunition, and gasoline
dealers. The number of small entities affected is unknown; however, the
fact that the positive effects will be seasonal in nature and will, in
most cases, merely continue preexisting uses of public lands indicates
that the effects will not be significant.
This rule benefits those participants who engage in the subsistence
harvest of fish and wildlife in Alaska in two identifiable ways: first,
participants get the consumptive value of the food harvested, and
second, participants get the cultural benefit associated with the
maintenance of a subsistence lifestyle. We can estimate the consumptive
value for fish and wildlife harvested under this rule but can place no
dollar value on the maintenance of a subsistence lifestyle. However, we
estimate that 8.7 million pounds of wildlife are harvested by the local
subsistence users annually and, if based on a replacement value of
$5.00 per pound, would equate to $43.5 million in food value Statewide.
A small additional number of pounds of fish are harvested by local
subsistence users in the Kenai Peninsula area. The cultural benefits of
maintaining a subsistence lifestyle can also be of considerable value
to the participants.
Title VIII of ANILCA requires the Secretaries to administer a
subsistence preference on public lands. The scope of
[[Page 73430]]
this program is limited by definition to certain public lands.
Likewise, these regulations have no potential implications for takings
of private property as defined by Executive Order 12630.
The Service has determined and certifies pursuant to the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act, 2 U.S.C. 1502 et seq., that this rulemaking will
not impose a cost of $100 million or more in any given year on local or
State governments or private entities. The implementation of this rule
is by Federal agencies, and no cost is involved to any State or local
entities or Tribal governments.
The Service has determined that these regulations meet the
applicable standards provided in sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of Executive
Order 12988 on Civil Justice Reform.
In accordance with Executive Order 13132, the rule does not have
sufficient Federalism implications to warrant the preparation of a
Federalism Assessment. Title VIII of ANILCA precludes the State from
exercising subsistence management authority over fish and wildlife
resources on Federal lands unless the State's program is compliant with
the requirements of that Title.
In accordance with the President's memorandum of April 29, 1994,
``Government-to-Government Relations with Native American Tribal
Governments'' (59 FR 22951), 512 DM 2, and E.O. 13175, we have
evaluated possible effects on Federally recognized Indian tribes and
have determined that there are no significant direct effects. The
Bureau of Indian Affairs is a participating agency in this rulemaking.
On May 18, 2001, the President issued Executive Order 13211 on
regulations that significantly affect energy supply, distribution, or
use. This Executive Order requires agencies to prepare Statements of
Energy Effects when undertaking certain actions. As this rule is not a
significant regulatory action under Executive Order 13211, affecting
energy supply, distribution, or use, no Statement of Energy Effects is
required.
Drafting Information--Theo Matuskowitz drafted these regulations
under the guidance of Peter J. Probasco of the Office of Subsistence
Management, Alaska Regional Office, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,
Anchorage, Alaska. Charles Ardizzone, Alaska State Office, Bureau of
Land Management; Sandy Rabinowitch and Nancy Swanton, Alaska Regional
Office, National Park Service; Drs. Warren Eastland and Glenn Chen,
Alaska Regional Office, Bureau of Indian Affairs; Jerry Berg, Alaska
Regional Office, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; and Steve Kessler,
Alaska Regional Office, U.S. Forest Service, provided additional
assistance.
List of Subjects
36 CFR Part 242
Administrative practice and procedure, Alaska, Fish, National
forests, Public lands, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,
Wildlife.
50 CFR Part 100
Administrative practice and procedure, Alaska, Fish, National
forests, Public lands, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,
Wildlife.
Regulation Promulgation
0
For the reasons set out in the preamble, the Federal Subsistence Board
amends title 36, part 242, and title 50, part 100, of the Code of
Federal Regulations, as set forth below.
PART ------SUBSISTENCE MANAGEMENT REGULATIONS FOR PUBLIC LANDS IN
ALASKA
0
1. The authority citation for both 36 CFR Part 242 and 50 CFR Part 100
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 3, 472, 551, 668dd, 3101-3126; 18 U.S.C.
3551-3586; 43 U.S.C. 1733.
Subpart C--Board Determinations
0
2. In subpart C of 36 CFR part 242 and 50 CFR part 100, Sec. --
--.24(a)(1) and (2) are revised to read as follows:
Sec. ----.24 Customary and traditional use determinations.
(a) * * *
(1) Wildlife determinations. The rural Alaska residents of the
listed communities and areas have a customary and traditional use of
the specified species on Federal public lands within the listed areas:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Area Species Determination
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unit 1C....................... Black Bear....... Residents of Unit 1C,
1D, 3, Hoonah,
Pelican, Point
Baker, Sitka, and
Tenakee Springs.
Unit 1A....................... Brown Bear....... Residents of Unit 1A,
except no
subsistence for
residents of Hyder.
Unit 1B....................... Brown Bear....... Residents of Unit 1A,
Petersburg, and
Wrangell, except no
subsistence for
residents of Hyder.
Unit 1C....................... Brown Bear....... Residents of Unit 1C,
Haines, Hoonah,
Kake, Klukwan,
Skagway, and
Wrangell, except no
subsistence for
residents of
Gustavus.
Unit 1D....................... Brown Bear....... Residents of 1D.
Unit 1A....................... Deer............. Residents of Units 1A
and 2.
Unit 1B....................... Deer............. Residents of Units
1A, 1B, 2, and 3.
Unit 1C....................... Deer............. Residents of 1C, 1D,
Hoonah, Kake, and
Petersburg.
Unit 1D....................... Deer............. No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 1B....................... Goat............. Residents of Units 1B
and 3.
Unit 1C....................... Goat............. Residents of Haines,
Kake, Klukwan,
Petersburg, and
Hoonah.
Unit 1B....................... Moose............ Residents of Units 1,
2, 3, and 4.
Unit 1C Berners Bay........... Moose............ No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 1D....................... Moose............ Residents of Unit 1D.
Unit 2........................ Deer............. Residents of Unit 1A,
2, and 3.
Unit 3........................ Deer............. Residents of Unit 1B,
3, Port Alexander,
Port Protection, Pt.
Baker, and Meyer's
Chuck.
Unit 3, Wrangell and Mitkof Moose............ Residents of Units
Islands. 1B, 2, and 3.
Unit 4........................ Brown Bear....... Residents of Unit 4
and Kake.
Unit 4........................ Deer............. Residents of Unit 4,
Kake, Gustavus,
Haines, Petersburg,
Pt. Baker, Klukwan,
Port Protection,
Wrangell, and
Yakutat.
[[Page 73431]]
Unit 4........................ Goat............. Residents of Sitka,
Hoonah, Tenakee,
Pelican, Funter Bay,
Angoon, Port
Alexander, and Elfin
Cove.
Unit 5........................ Black Bear....... Residents of Unit 5A.
Unit 5........................ Brown Bear....... Residents of Yakutat.
Unit 5........................ Deer............. Residents of Yakutat.
Unit 5........................ Goat............. Residents of Unit 5A
Unit 5........................ Moose............ Residents of Unit 5A.
Unit 5........................ Wolf............. Residents of Unit 5A.
Unit 6A....................... Black Bear....... Residents of Yakutat
and Unit 6C and 6D,
except no
subsistence for
Whittier.
Unit 6, remainder............. Black Bear....... Residents of Unit 6C
and 6D, except no
subsistence for
Whittier.
Unit 6........................ Brown Bear....... No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 6A....................... Goat............. Residents of Unit 5A,
6C, Chenega Bay, and
TaTitlek.
Unit 6C and Unit 6D........... Goat............. Residents of Unit 6C
and D.
Unit 6A....................... Moose............ Residents of Units
5A, 6A, 6B and 6C.
Unit 6B and Unit 6C........... Moose............ Residents of Units
6A, 6B and 6C.
Unit 6D....................... Moose............ No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 6A....................... Wolf............. Residents of Units
5A, 6, 9, 10 (Unimak
Island only), 11-13
and the residents of
Chickaloon, and 16-
26.
Unit 6, remainder............. Wolf............. Residents of Units 6,
9, 10 (Unimak Island
only), 11-13 and the
residents of
Chickaloon, and 16-
26.
Unit 7........................ Brown Bear....... No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 7........................ Caribou.......... No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 7, Brown Mountain hunt Goat............. Residents of Port
area. Graham and Nanwalek.
Unit 7, that portion draining Moose............ Residents of Chenega
into Kings Bay. Bay and TaTitlek.
Unit 7, remainder............. Moose............ No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 7........................ Sheep............ No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 7........................ Ruffed Grouse.... No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 8........................ Brown Bear....... Residents of Old
Harbor, Akhiok,
Larsen Bay, Karluk,
Ouzinkie, and Port
Lions.
Unit 8........................ Deer............. Residents of Unit 8.
Unit 8........................ Elk.............. Residents of Unit 8.
Unit 8........................ Goat............. No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 9D....................... Bison............ No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 9A and Unit 9B........... Black Bear....... Residents of Units
9A, 9B, 17A, 17B,
and 17C.
Unit 9A....................... Brown Bear....... Residents of Pedro
Bay.
Unit 9B....................... Brown Bear....... Residents of Unit 9B.
Unit 9C....................... Brown Bear....... Residents of Unit 9C.
Unit 9D....................... Brown Bear....... Residents of Units 9D
and 10 (Unimak
Island).
Unit 9E....................... Brown Bear....... Residents of Chignik,
Chignik Lagoon,
Chignik Lake,
Egegik, Ivanof Bay,
Perryville, Pilot
Point, Ugashik, and
Port Heiden/Meshik.
Unit 9A and Unit 9B........... Caribou.......... Residents of Units
9B, 9C, and 17.
Unit 9C....................... Caribou.......... Residents of Unit 9B,
9C, 17, and Egegik.
Unit 9D....................... Caribou.......... Residents of Unit 9D,
Akutan, and False
Pass.
Unit 9E....................... Caribou.......... Residents of Units
9B, 9C, 9E, 17,
Nelson Lagoon and
Sand Point.
Unit 9A, Unit 9B, Unit 9C and Moose............ Residents of Unit 9A,
Unit 9E. 9B, 9C, and 9E.
Unit 9D....................... Moose............ Residents of Cold
Bay, False Pass,
King Cove, Nelson
Lagoon, and Sand
Point.
Unit 9B....................... Sheep............ Residents of Iliamna,
Newhalen, Nondalton,
Pedro Bay, Port
Alsworth, and
residents of Lake
Clark National Park
and Preserve within
Unit 9B.
Unit 9, remainder............. Sheep............ No determination.
Unit 9........................ Wolf............. Residents of Units 6,
9, 10 (Unimak Island
only), 11-13 and the
residents of
Chickaloon, and 16-
26.
Unit 9A, Unit B, Unit C, & Beaver........... Residents of Units
Unit E. 9A, 9B, 9C, 9E, and
17.
Unit 10 Unimak Island......... Brown Bear....... Residents of Units 9D
and 10 (Unimak
Island).
Unit 10 Unimak Island......... Caribou.......... Residents of Akutan,
False Pass, King
Cove, and Sand
Point.
Unit 10, remainder............ Caribou.......... No determination.
Unit 10....................... Wolf............. Residents of Units 6,
9, 10 (Unimak Island
only), 11-13 and the
residents of
Chickaloon, and 16-
26.
Unit 11....................... Bison............ No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 11, north of the Sanford Black Bear....... Residents of
River. Chistochina,
Chitina, Copper
Center, Gakona,
Glennallen, Gulkana,
Kenny Lake, Mentasta
Lake, Slana,
Tazlina, Tonsina,
and Units 11 and 12.
Unit 11, remainder............ Black Bear....... Residents of
Chistochina,
Chitina, Copper
Center, Gakona,
Glennallen, Gulkana,
Kenny Lake, Mentasta
Lake, Slana,
Tazlina, Tonsina,
and Unit 11.
Unit 11, north of the Sanford Brown Bear....... Residents of
River. Chistochina,
Chitina, Copper
Center, Gakona,
Glennallen, Gulkana,
Kenny Lake, Mentasta
Lake, Slana,
Tazlina, Tonsina,
and Units 11 and 12.
[[Page 73432]]
Unit 11, remainder............ Brown Bear....... Residents of
Chistochina,
Chitina, Copper
Center, Gakona,
Glennallen, Gulkana,
Kenny Lake, Mentasta
Lake, Slana,
Tazlina, Tonsina,
and Unit 11.
Unit 11, north of the Sanford Caribou.......... Residents of Units
River. 11, 12, 13A-D,
Chickaloon, Healy
Lake, and Dot Lake.
Unit 11, remainder............ Caribou.......... Residents of Units
11, 13A-D, and
Chickaloon.
Unit 11....................... Goat............. Residents of Unit 11,
Chitina,
Chistochina, Copper
Center, Gakona,
Glennallen, Gulkana,
Mentasta Lake,
Slana, Tazlina,
Tonsina, and Dot
Lake.
Unit 11, north of the Sanford Moose............ Residents of Units
River. 11, 12, 13A-D,
Chickaloon, Healy
Lake, and Dot Lake.
Unit 11, remainder............ Moose............ Residents of Units
11, 13A-D, and
Chickaloon.
Unit 11, north of the Sanford Sheep............ Residents of Unit 12,
River. Chistochina,
Chitina, Copper
Center, Dot Lake,
Gakona, Glennallen,
Gulkana, Healy Lake,
Kenny Lake, Mentasta
Lake, Slana,
McCarthy/South
Wrangell/South Park,
Tazlina, Tonsina,
residents along the
Nabesna Road--
Milepost 0-46
(Nabesna Road), and
residents along the
McCarthy Road--
Milepost 0-62
(McCarthy Road).
Unit 11, remainder............ Sheep............ Residents of Chisana,
Chistochina,
Chitina, Copper
Center, Gakona,
Glennallen, Gulkana,
Kenny Lake, Mentasta
Lake, Slana,
McCarthy/South
Wrangell/South Park,
Tazlina, Tonsina,
residents along the
Tok Cutoff--Milepost
79-110 (Mentasta
Pass), residents
along the Nabesna
Road--Milepost 0-46
(Nabesna Road), and
residents along the
McCarthy Road--
Milepost 0-62
(McCarthy Road).
Unit 11....................... Wolf............. Residents of Units 6,
9, 10 (Unimak Island
only), 11-13 and the
residents of
Chickaloon, and 16-
26.
Unit 11....................... Grouse (Spruce, Residents of Units
Blue, Ruffed and 11, 12, 13 and the
Sharp-tailed). residents of
Chickaloon, 15, 16,
20D, 22 and 23.
Unit 11....................... Ptarmigan (Rock, Residents of Units
Willow and White- 11, 12, 13 and the
tailed). residents of
Chickaloon, 15, 16,
20D, 22 and 23.
Unit 12....................... Brown Bear....... Residents of Unit 12,
Dot Lake,
Chistochina, Gakona,
Mentasta Lake, and
Slana.
Unit 12....................... Caribou.......... Residents of Unit 12,
Dot Lake, Healy
Lake, and Mentasta
Lake.
Unit 12, that portion within Moose............ Residents of Unit 12,
the Tetlin National Wildlife 13C, Dot Lake, and
Refuge and those lands within Healy Lake.
the Wrangell-St. Elias
National Preserve north and
east of a line formed by the
Pickerel Lake Winter Trail
from the Canadian border to
Pickerel Lake.
Unit 12, that portion east of Moose............ Residents of Unit 12,
the Nabesna River and Nabesna 13C, and Healy Lake.
Glacier, and south of the
Winter Trail running
southeast from Pickerel Lake
to the Canadian border.
Unit 12, remainder............ Moose............ Residents of Unit 11
north of 62nd
parallel, Unit 12,
13A-D and the
residents of
Chickaloon, Dot
Lake, and Healy
Lake.
Unit 12....................... Sheep............ Residents of Unit 12,
Chistochina, Dot
Lake, Healy Lake,
and Mentasta Lake.
Unit 12....................... Wolf............. Residents of Units 6,
9, 10 (Unimak Island
only), 11-13 and the
residents of
Chickaloon, and 16-
26.
Unit 13....................... Brown Bear....... Residents of Unit 13
and Slana.
Unit 13B...................... Caribou.......... Residents of Units
11, 12 (along the
Nabesna Road), 13,
residents of Unit
20D except Fort
Greely, and the
residents of
Chickaloon.
Unit 13C...................... Caribou.......... Residents of Units
11, 12 (along the
Nabesna Road), 13,
Chickaloon, Dot Lake
and Healy Lake.
Unit 13A and Unit 13D......... Caribou.......... Residents of Units
11, 12 (along the
Nabesna Road), 13,
and the residents of
Chickaloon.
Unit 13E...................... Caribou.......... Residents of Units
11, 12 (along the
Nabesna Road), 13,
Chickaloon, McKinley
Village, and the
area along the Parks
Highway between
mileposts 216 and
239 (except no
subsistence for
residents of Denali
National Park
headquarters).
Unit 13D...................... Goat............. No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 13A and Unit 13D......... Moose............ Residents of Unit 13,
Chickaloon, and
Slana.
Unit 13B...................... Moose............ Residents of Units
13, 20D except Fort
Greely, and the
residents of
Chickaloon and
Slana.
Unit 13C...................... Moose............ Residents of Units
12, 13, and the
residents of
Chickaloon, Healy
Lake, Dot Lake and
Slana.
[[Page 73433]]
Unit 13E...................... Moose............ Residents of Unit 13,
Chickaloon, McKinley
Village, Slana, and
the area along the
Parks Highway
between mileposts
216 and 239 (except
no subsistence for
residents of Denali
National Park
headquarters).
Unit 13D...................... Sheep............ No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 13....................... Wolf............. Residents of Units 6,
9, 10 (Unimak Island
only), 11-13 and the
residents of
Chickaloon, and 16-
26.
Unit 13....................... Grouse (Spruce, Residents of Units
Blue, Ruffed & 11, 13 and the
Sharp-tailed). residents of
Chickaloon, 15, 16,
20D, 22 & 23.
Unit 13....................... Ptarmigan (Rock, Residents of Units
Willow and White- 11, 13 and the
tailed). residents of
Chickaloon, 15, 16,
20D, 22 & 23.
Unit 14C...................... Brown Bear....... No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 14....................... Goat............. No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 14....................... Moose............ No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 14A and Unit 14C......... Sheep............ No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 15A and Unit 15B......... Black Bear....... Residents of
Ninilchik.
Unit 15C...................... Black Bear....... Residents of
Ninilchik, Port
Graham, and
Nanwalek.
Unit 15C...................... Brown Bear....... Residents of
Ninilchik.
Unit 15, remainder............ Brown Bear....... No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 15....................... Moose............ Residents of
Ninilchik, Nanwalek,
Port Graham, and
Seldovia.
Unit 15....................... Sheep............ No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 15....................... Ptarmigan (Rock, Residents of Unit 15.
Willow and White-
tailed).
Unit 15....................... Grouse (Spruce).. Residents of Unit 15.
Unit 15....................... Grouse (Ruffed).. No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 16B...................... Black Bear....... Residents of Unit
16B.
Unit 16....................... Brown Bear....... No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 16A...................... Moose............ No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 16B...................... Moose............ Residents of Unit
16B.
Unit 16....................... Sheep............ No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 16....................... Wolf............. Residents of Units 6,
9, 10 (Unimak Island
only), 11-13 and the
residents of
Chickaloon, and 16-
26.
Unit 16....................... Grouse (Spruce Residents of Units
and Ruffed). 11, 13 and the
residents of
Chickaloon, 15, 16,
20D, 22 and 23.
Unit 16....................... Ptarmigan (Rock, Residents of Units
Willow and White- 11, 13 and the
tailed). residents of
Chickaloon, 15, 16,
20D, 22 and 23.
Unit 17A and that portion of Black Bear....... Residents of Units 9A
17B draining into Nuyakuk and B, 17, Akiak,
Lake and Tikchik Lake. and Akiachak.
Unit 17, remainder............ Black Bear....... Residents of Units 9A
and B, and 17.
Unit 17A and Unit 17B, those Brown Bear....... Residents of
portions north and west of a Kwethluk.
line beginning from the Unit
18 boundary at the northwest
end of Nenevok Lake, to the
southern point of upper
Togiak Lake, and northeast to
the northern point of Nuyakuk
Lake, northeast to the point
where the Unit 17 boundary
intersects the Shotgun Hills.
Unit 17A, remainder........... Brown Bear....... Residents of Unit 17,
Akiak, Akiachak,
Goodnews Bay, and
Platinum.
Unit 17B, that portion Brown Bear....... Residents of Akiak
draining into Nuyakuk Lake and Akiachak.
and Tikchik Lake.
Unit 17B and Unit 17C......... Brown Bear....... Residents of Unit 17.
Unit 17A, that portion west of Caribou.......... Residents of Goodnews
the Izavieknik River, Upper Bay, Platinum,
Togiak Lake, Togiak Lake, and Quinhagak, Eek,
the main course of the Togiak Tuntutuliak, and
River. Napakiak.
Unit 17A, that portion north Caribou.......... Residents of Akiak,
of Togiak Lake that includes Akiachak, and
Izavieknik River drainages. Tuluksak.
Unit 17A and 17B, those Caribou.......... Residents of
portions north and west of a Kwethluk.
line beginning from the Unit
18 boundary at the northwest
end of Nenevok Lake, to the
southern point of upper
Togiak Lake, and northeast to
the northern point of Nuyakuk
Lake, northeast to the point
where the Unit 17 boundary
intersects the Shotgun Hills.
Unit 17B, that portion of Caribou.......... Residents of Bethel,
Togiak National Wildlife Goodnews Bay,
Refuge within Unit 17B. Platinum, Quinhagak,
Eek, Akiak,
Akiachak, Tuluksak,
Tuntutuliak, and
Napakiak.
Unit 17, remainder............ Caribou.......... Residents of Units
9B, 17, Lime
Village, and Stony
River.
17A and 17B, those portions Moose............ Residents of
north and west of a line Kwethluk.
beginning from the Unit 18
boundary at the northwest end
of Nenevok Lake, to the
southern point of upper
Togiak Lake, and northeast to
the northern point of Nuyakuk
Lake, northeast to the point
where the Unit 17 boundary
intersects the Shotgun Hills.
[[Page 73434]]
Unit 17A, that portion north Moose............ Residents of Akiak,
of Togiak Lake that includes Akiachak.
Izavieknik River drainages.
Unit 17A, remainder........... Moose............ Residents of Unit 17,
Goodnews Bay and
Platinum; however,
no subsistence for
residents of
Akiachak, Akiak and
Quinhagak.
Unit 17B, that portion within Moose............ Residents of Akiak,
the Togiak National Wildlife Akiachak.
Refuge.
Unit 17B, remainder and Unit Moose............ Residents of Unit 17,
17C. Nondalton, Levelock,
Goodnews Bay, and
Platinum.
Unit 17....................... Wolf............. Residents of Units 6,
9, 10 (Unimak Island
only), 11-13 and the
residents of
Chickaloon, and 16-
26.
Unit 17....................... Beaver........... Residents of Units
9A, 9B, 9C, 9E, and
17.
Unit 18....................... Black Bear....... Residents of Unit 18,
Unit 19A living
downstream of the
Holokuk River, Holy
Cross, Stebbins, St.
Michael, Twin Hills,
and Togiak.
Unit 18....................... Brown Bear....... Residents of
Akiachak, Akiak,
Eek, Goodnews Bay,
Kwethluk, Mt.
Village, Napaskiak,
Platinum, Quinhagak,
St. Marys, and
Tuluksak.
Unit 18....................... Caribou.......... Residents of Unit 18,
Manokotak, Stebbins,
St. Michael, Togiak,
Twin Hills, and
Upper Kalskag.
Unit 18, that portion of the Moose............ Residents of Unit 18,
Yukon River drainage upstream Upper Kalskag,
of Russian Mission and that Aniak, and
portion of the Kuskokwim Chuathbaluk.
River drainage upstream of,
but not including, the
Tuluksak River drainage.
Unit 18, that portion north of Moose............ Residents of Unit 18,
a line from Cape Romanzof to St. Michael,
Kusilvak Mountain to Mountain Stebbins, and Upper
Village, and all drainages Kalskag.
north of the Yukon River
downstream from Marshall.
Unit 18, remainder............ Moose............ Residents of Unit 18
and Upper Kalskag.
Unit 18....................... Musk ox.......... No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 18....................... Wolf............. Residents of Units 6,
9, 10 (Unimak Island
only), 11-13 and the
residents of
Chickaloon, and 16-
26.
Unit 19C and Unit 19D......... Bison............ No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 19A and Unit 19B......... Brown Bear....... Residents of Units 19
and 18 within the
Kuskokwim River
drainage upstream
from, and including,
the Johnson River.
Unit 19C...................... Brown Bear....... No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 19D...................... Brown Bear....... Residents of Units
19A and D, Tuluksak
and Lower Kalskag.
Unit 19A and Unit 19B......... Caribou.......... Residents of Units
19A and 19B, Unit 18
within the Kuskokwim
River drainage
upstream from, and
including, the
Johnson River, and
residents of St.
Marys, Marshall,
Pilot Station,
Russian Mission.
Unit 19C...................... Caribou.......... Residents of Unit
19C, Lime Village,
McGrath, Nikolai,
and Telida.
Unit 19D...................... Caribou.......... Residents of Unit
19D, Lime Village,
Sleetmute, and Stony
River.
Unit 19A and Unit 9B.......... Moose............ Residents of Unit 18
within Kuskokwim
River drainage
upstream from and
including the
Johnson River, and
residents of Unit
19.
Unit 19B, west of the Moose............ Residents of Eek and
Kogrukluk River. Quinhagak.
Unit 19C...................... Moose............ Residents of Unit 19.
Unit 19D...................... Moose............ Residents of Unit 19
and Lake Minchumina.
Unit 19....................... Wolf............. Residents of Units 6,
9, 10 (Unimak Island
only), 11-13 and the
residents of
Chickaloon, and 16-
26.
Unit 20D...................... Bison............ No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 20F...................... Black Bear....... Residents of Unit
20F, Stevens
Village, and Manley.
Unit 20E...................... Brown Bear....... Residents of Unit 12
and Dot Lake.
Unit 20F...................... Brown Bear....... Residents of Unit
20F, Stevens
Village, and Manley.
Unit 20A...................... Caribou.......... Residents of
Cantwell, Nenana,
and those domiciled
between mileposts
216 and 239 of the
Parks Highway. No
subsistence priority
for residents of
households of the
Denali National Park
Headquarters.
Unit 20B...................... Caribou.......... Residents of Unit
20B, Nenana, and
Tanana.
Unit 20C...................... Caribou.......... Residents of Unit 20C
living east of the
Teklanika River,
residents of
Cantwell, Lake
Minchumina, Manley
Hot Springs, Minto,
Nenana, Nikolai,
Tanana, Talida, and
those domiciled
between mileposts
216 and 239 of the
Parks Highway and
between mileposts
300 and 309. No
subsistence priority
for residents of
households of the
Denali National Park
Headquarters.
Unit 20D and Unit 20E......... Caribou.......... Residents of 20D,
20E, and Unit 12
north of the
Wrangell-St. Elias
National Park and
Preserve.
[[Page 73435]]
Unit 20F...................... Caribou.......... Residents of 20F,
25D, and Manley.
Unit 20A...................... Moose............ Residents of
Cantwell, Minto,
Nenana, McKinley
Village, and the
area along the Parks
Highway between
mileposts 216 and
239, except no
subsistence for
residents of
households of the
Denali National Park
Headquarters.
Unit 20B, Minto Flats Moose............ Residents of Minto
Management Area. and Nenana.
Unit 20B, remainder........... Moose............ Residents of Unit
20B, Nenana, and
Tanana.
Unit 20C...................... Moose............ Residents of Unit 20C
(except that portion
within Denali
National Park and
Preserve and that
portion east of the
Teklanika River),
Cantwell,
``Manley'', Minto,
Nenana, those
domiciled between
mileposts 300 and
309 of the Parks
Highway, Nikolai,
Tanana, Telida,
McKinley Village,
and the area along
the Parks Highway
between mileposts
216 and 239. No
subsistence for
residents of
households of the
Denali National Park
Headquarters.
Unit 20D...................... Moose............ Residents of Unit 20D
and residents of
Tanacross.
Unit 20E...................... Moose............ Residents of Unit
20E, Unit 12 north
of the Wrangell-St.
Elias National
Preserve, Circle,
Central, Dot Lake,
Healy Lake, and
Mentasta Lake.
Unit 20F...................... Moose............ Residents of Unit
20F, ``Manley'',
Minto, and Stevens
Village.
Unit 20F...................... Wolf............. Residents of Unit
20F, Stevens
Village, and
``Manley''.
Unit 20, remainder............ Wolf............. Residents of Units 6,
9, 10 (Unimak Island
only), 11-13 and the
residents of
Chickaloon, and 16-
26.
Unit 20D...................... Grouse, (Spruce, Residents of Units
Ruffed and Sharp- 11, 13 and the
tailed). residents of
Chickaloon, 15, 16,
20D, 22, and 23.
Unit 20D...................... Ptarmigan (Rock Residents of Units
and Willow). 11, 13 and the
residents of
Chickaloon, 15, 16,
20D, 22, and 23.
Unit 21....................... Brown Bear....... Residents of Units 21
and 23.
Unit 21A...................... Caribou.......... Residents of Units
21A, 21D, 21E,
Aniak, Chuathbaluk,
Crooked Creek,
McGrath, and
Takotna.
Unit 21B and Unit 21C......... Caribou.......... Residents of Units
21B, 21C, 21D, and
Tanana.
Unit 21D...................... Caribou.......... Residents of Units
21B, 21C, 21D, and
Huslia.
Unit 21E...................... Caribou.......... Residents of Units
21A, 21E, Aniak,
Chuathbaluk, Crooked
Creek, McGrath, and
Takotna.
Unit 21A...................... Moose............ Residents of Units
21A, 21E, Takotna,
McGrath, Aniak, and
Crooked Creek.
Unit 21B and Unit 21C......... Moose............ Residents of Units
21B, 21C, Tanana,
Ruby, and Galena.
Unit 21D...................... Moose............ Residents of Units
21D, Huslia, and
Ruby.
Unit 21E...................... Moose............ Residents of Unit 21E
and Russian Mission.
Unit 21....................... Wolf............. Residents of Units 6,
9, 10 (Unimak Island
only), 11-13 and the
residents of
Chickaloon, and 16-
26.
Unit 22A...................... Black Bear....... Residents of Unit 22A
and Koyuk.
Unit 22B...................... Black Bear....... Residents of Unit
22B.
Unit 22C, Unit 22D, and Unit Black Bear....... No Federal
22E. subsistence
priority.
Unit 22....................... Brown Bear....... Residents of Unit 22
Unit 22A...................... Caribou.......... Residents of Unit 21D
west of the Koyukuk
and Yukon Rivers, 22
(except residents of
St. Lawrence
Island), 23, 24,
Kotlik, Emmonak,
Hooper Bay, Scammon
Bay, Chevak,
Marshall, Mountain
Village, Pilot
Station, Pitka's
Point, Russian
Mission, St. Marys,
Nunam Iqua, and
Alakanuk.
Unit 22, remainder............ Caribou.......... Residents of Unit 21D
west of the Koyukuk
and Yukon Rivers, 22
(except residents of
St. Lawrence
Island), 23, and 24.
Unit 22....................... Moose............ Residents of Unit 22.
Unit 22B, west of the Darby Musk ox.......... Residents of Unit 22B
Mountains. and 22C.
Unit 22B, remainder........... Musk ox.......... Residents of Unit
22B.
Unit 22C...................... Musk ox.......... Residents of Unit
22C.
Unit 22D, that portion within Musk ox.......... Residents of Unit
the Kougarok, Kuzitrin, and 22C, White Mountain,
Pilgrim River drainages. and Unit 22D
excluding St.
Lawrence Island.
Unit 22D, remainder........... Musk ox.......... Residents of Unit 22D
excluding St.
Lawrence Island.
Unit 22E...................... Musk ox.......... Residents of Unit 22E
excluding Little
Diomede Island.
Unit 22....................... Wolf............. Residents of Units
23, 22, 21D north
and west of the
Yukon River, and
Kotlik.
Unit 22....................... Grouse (Spruce).. Residents of Units
11, 13 and the
residents of
Chickaloon, 15, 16,
20D, 22, and 23.
Unit 22....................... Ptarmigan (Rock Residents of Units
and Willow). 11, 13 and the
residents of
Chickaloon, 15, 16,
20D, 22, and 23.
Unit 23....................... Black Bear....... Residents of Unit 23,
Alatna, Allakaket,
Bettles, Evansville,
Galena, Hughes,
Huslia, and Koyukuk.
[[Page 73436]]
Unit 23....................... Brown Bear....... Residents of Units 21
and 23.
Unit 23....................... Caribou.......... Residents of Unit 21D
west of the Koyukuk
and Yukon Rivers,
Galena, 22, 23, 24
including residents
of Wiseman but not
including other
residents of the
Dalton Highway
Corridor Management
Area, and 26A.
Unit 23....................... Moose............ Residents of Unit 23.
Unit 23, south of Kotzebue Musk ox.......... Residents of Unit 23
Sound and west of and south of Kotzebue
including the Buckland River Sound and west of
drainage. and including the
Buckland River
drainage.
Unit 23, remainder............ Musk ox.......... Residents of Unit 23
east and north of
the Buckland River
drainage.
Unit 23....................... Sheep............ Residents of Point
Lay and Unit 23
north of the Arctic
Circle.
Unit 23....................... Wolf............. Residents of Units 6,
9, 10 (Unimak Island
only), 11-13 and the
residents of
Chickaloon, and 16-
26.
Unit 23....................... Grouse (Spruce Residents of Units
and Ruffed). 11, 13 and the
residents of
Chickaloon, 15, 16,
20D, 22, and 23.
Unit 23....................... Ptarmigan (Rock, Residents of Units
Willow and White- 11, 13 and the
tailed). residents of
Chickaloon, 15, 16,
20D, 22, and 23.
Unit 24, that portion south of Black Bear....... Residents of Stevens
Caribou Mountain, and within Village, Unit 24 and
the public lands composing or Wiseman, but not
immediately adjacent to the including any other
Dalton Highway Corridor residents of the
Management Area. Dalton Highway
Corridor Management
Area.
Unit 24, remainder............ Black Bear....... Residents of Unit 24
and Wiseman, but not
including any other
residents of the
Dalton Highway
Corridor Management
Area.
Unit 24, that portion south of Brown Bear....... Residents of Stevens
Caribou Mountain, and within Village and
the public lands composing or residents of Unit
immediately adjacent to the 24.
Dalton Highway Corridor
Management Area.
Unit 24, remainder............ Brown Bear....... Residents of Unit 24.
Unit 24....................... Caribou.......... Residents of Unit 24,
Galena, Kobuk,
Koyukuk, Stevens
Village, and Tanana.
Unit 24....................... Moose............ Residents of Unit 24,
Koyukuk, and Galena.
Unit 24....................... Sheep............ Residents of Unit 24
residing north of
the Arctic Circle,
Allakaket, Alatna,
Hughes, and Huslia.
Unit 24....................... Wolf............. Residents of Units 6,
9, 10 (Unimak Island
only), 11-13 and the
residents of
Chickaloon and 16-
26.
Unit 25D...................... Black Bear....... Residents of Unit
25D.
Unit 25D...................... Brown Bear....... Residents of Unit
25D.
Unit 25, remainder............ Brown Bear....... Residents of Unit 25
and Eagle.
Unit 25D...................... Caribou.......... Residents of 20F,
25D, and Manley
Unit 25A...................... Moose............ Residents of Units
25A and 25D.
Unit 25D, west................ Moose............ Residents of Unit 25D
West.
Unit 25D, remainder........... Moose............ Residents of
remainder of Unit
25.
Unit 25A...................... Sheep............ Residents of Arctic
Village,
Chalkyitsik, Fort
Yukon, Kaktovik, and
Venetie.
Unit 25B and Unit 25C......... Sheep............ No Federal
subsistence
priority.
Unit 25D...................... Wolf............. Residents of Unit
25D.
Unit 25, remainder............ Wolf............. Residents of Units 6,
9, 10 (Unimak Island
only), 11-13 and the
residents of
Chickaloon, and 16-
26.
Unit 26....................... Brown Bear....... Residents of Unit 26
(except the Prudhoe
Bay-Deadhorse
Industrial Complex),
Anaktuvuk Pass, and
Point Hope.
Unit 26A and C................ Caribou.......... Residents of Unit 26,
Anaktuvuk Pass, and
Point Hope.
Unit 26B...................... Caribou.......... Residents of Unit 26,
Anaktuvuk Pass,
Point Hope, and
residents of Unit 24
within the Dalton
Highway Corridor
Management Area.
Unit 26....................... Moose............ Residents of Unit 26
(except the Prudhoe
Bay-Deadhorse
Industrial Complex),
Point Hope, and
Anaktuvuk Pass.
Unit 26A...................... Musk ox.......... Residents of
Anaktuvuk Pass,
Atqasuk, Barrow,
Nuiqsut, Point Hope,
Point Lay, and
Wainwright.
Unit 26B...................... Musk ox.......... Residents of
Anaktuvuk Pass,
Nuiqsut, and
Kaktovik.
Unit 26C...................... Musk ox.......... Residents of
Kaktovik.
Unit 26A...................... Sheep............ Residents of Unit 26,
Anaktuvuk Pass, and
Point Hope.
Unit 26B...................... Sheep............ Residents of Unit 26,
Anaktuvuk Pass,
Point Hope, and
Wiseman.
Unit 26C...................... Sheep............ Residents of Unit 26,
Anaktuvuk Pass,
Arctic Village,
Chalkyitsik, Fort
Yukon, Point Hope,
and Venetie.
Unit 26....................... Wolf............. Residents of Units 6,
9, 10 (Unimak Island
only), 11-13 and the
residents of
Chickaloon, and 16-
26.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 73437]]
(2) Fish determinations. The following communities and areas have
been found to have a positive customary and traditional use
determination in the listed area for the indicated species:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Area Species Determination
------------------------------------------------------------------------
KOTZEBUE AREA................. All fish......... Residents of the
Kotzebue Area.
NORTON SOUND--PORT CLARENCE
AREA:
Norton Sound-Port Clarence All fish......... Residents of
Area, waters draining Stebbins, St.
into Norton Sound between Michael, and Kotlik.
Point Romanof and Canal
Point.
Norton Sound-Port Clarence All fish......... Residents of the
Area, remainder. Norton Sound-Port
Clarence Area.
YUKON-NORTHERN AREA:
Yukon River drainage...... Salmon, other Residents of the
than fall chum Yukon River drainage
salmon. and the community of
Stebbins.
Yukon River drainage...... Fall chum salmon. Residents of the
Yukon River drainage
and the communities
of Stebbins, Scammon
Bay, Hooper Bay, and
Chevak.
Yukon River drainage...... Freshwater fish Residents of the
(other than Yukon-Northern Area.
salmon).
Remainder of the Yukon- All fish......... Residents of the
Northern Area. Yukon-Northern Area,
excluding the
residents of the
Yukon River drainage
and excluding those
domiciled in Unit
26B.
Tanana River drainage Freshwater fish Residents of the
contained within the Tetlin (other than Yukon-Northern Area
NWR and the Wrangell-St. salmon). and residents of
Elias NPP. Mentasta Lake,
Chistochina, Slana,
and all residents
living between
Mentasta Lake and
Chistochina.
KUSKOKWIM AREA................ Salmon........... Residents of the
Kuskokwim Area,
except those persons
residing on the
United States
military
installations
located on Cape
Newenham, Sparrevohn
USAFB, and Tatalina
USAFB.
Rainbow trout.... Residents of the
communities of
Akiachak, Akiak,
Aniak, Atmautluak,
Bethel, Chuathbaluk,
Crooked Creek, Eek,
Goodnews Bay,
Kasigluk, Kwethluk,
Lower Kalskag,
Napakiak, Napaskiak,
Nunapitchuk,
Oscarville,
Platinum, Quinhagak,
Tuluksak,
Tuntutuliak, and
Upper Kalskag.
Pacific cod...... Residents of the
communities of
Chevak, Newtok,
Tununak, Toksook
Bay, Nightmute,
Chefornak, Kipnuk,
Mekoryuk,
Kwigillingok,
Kongiganak, Eek, and
Tuntutuliak.
All other fish Residents of the
other than Kuskokwim Area,
herring. except those persons
residing on the
United States
military
installation located
on Cape Newenham,
Sparrevohn USAFB,
and Tatalina USAFB.
Waters around Nunivak Island.. Herring and Residents within 20
herring roe. miles of the coast
between the
westernmost tip of
the Naskonat
Peninsula and the
terminus of the
Ishowik River and on
Nunivak Island.
BRISTOL BAY AREA--
Nushagak District, including Salmon and Residents of the
drainages flowing into the freshwater fish. Nushagak District
district. and freshwater
drainages flowing
into the district.
Naknek-Kvichak District-- Salmon and Residents of the
Naknek River drainage. freshwater fish. Naknek and Kvichak
River drainages.
Naknek-Kvichak District-- Salmon and Residents of the
Kvichak/Iliamna-Lake Clark freshwater fish. Kvichak/Iliamna-Lake
drainage. Clark drainage.
Togiak District, including Salmon and Residents of the
drainages flowing into the freshwater fish. Togiak District,
district. freshwater drainages
flowing into the
district, and the
community of
Manokotak.
Egegik District, including Salmon and Residents of South
drainages flowing into the freshwater fish. Naknek, the Egegik
district. District and
freshwater drainages
flowing into the
district.
Ugashik District, including Salmon and Residents of the
drainages flowing into the freshwater fish. Ugashik District and
district. freshwater drainages
flowing into the
district.
Togiak District............... Herring spawn on Residents of the
kelp. Togiak District and
freshwater drainages
flowing into the
district.
Remainder of the Bristol Bay All fish......... Residents of the
Area. Bristol Bay Area.
ALEUTIAN ISLANDS AREA......... All fish......... Residents of the
Aleutian Islands
Area and the
Pribilof Islands.
ALASKA PENINSULA AREA......... Halibut.......... Residents of the
Alaska Peninsula
Area and the
communities of
Ivanof Bay and
Perryville.
All other fish in Residents of the
the Alaska Alaska Peninsula
Peninsula Area. Area.
CHIGNIK AREA.................. Halibut, salmon Residents of the
and fish other Chignik Area.
than rainbow/
steelhead trout.
[[Page 73438]]
KODIAK AREA--except the Salmon........... Residents of the
Mainland District, all waters Kodiak Island
along the south side of the Borough, except
Alaska Peninsula bounded by those residing on
the latitude of Cape Douglas the Kodiak Coast
(58[deg]51.10' North Guard Base.
latitude) mid-stream Shelikof
Strait, north and east of the
longitude of the southern
entrance of Imuya Bay near
Kilokak Rocks (57[deg]10.34'
North latitude,
156[deg]20.22' West
longitude).
Kodiak Area................... Fish other than Residents of the
rainbow/ Kodiak Area.
steelhead trout
and salmon.
COOK INLET AREA...............
Kenai Peninsula District-- All fish......... Residents of the
Waters north of and including communities of Hope
the Kenai River drainage and Cooper Landing.
within the Kenai National
Wildlife Refuge and the
Chugach National Forest.
Kenai Peninsula District-- Salmon........... Residents of the
Waters north of and including community of
the Kenai River drainage Ninilchik.
within the Kenai National
Wildlife Refuge and the
Chugach National Forest.
Waters within the Kasilof All fish......... Residents of the
River drainage within the community of
Kenai NWR. Ninilchik.
Waters within Lake Clark Salmon........... Residents of the
National Park draining into Tuxedni Bay area.
and including that portion of
Tuxedni Bay within the park.
Cook Inlet Area............... Fish other than Residents of the Cook
salmon, Dolly Inlet Area.
Varden, trout,
char, grayling,
and burbot.
PRINCE WILLIAM SOUND AREA:
Southwestern District and Salmon........... Residents of the
Green Island. Southwestern
District, which is
mainland waters from
the outer point on
the north shore of
Granite Bay to Cape
Fairfield, and
Knight Island,
Chenega Island,
Bainbridge Island,
Evans Island,
Elrington Island,
Latouche Island and
adjacent islands.
North of a line from Salmon........... Residents of the
Porcupine Point to villages of Tatitlek
Granite Point, and south and Ellamar.
of a line from Point Lowe
to Tongue Point.
Copper River drainage Freshwater fish.. Residents of
upstream from Haley Creek. Cantwell, Chisana,
Chistochina,
Chitina, Copper
Center, Dot Lake,
Gakona, Gakona
Junction,
Glennallen, Gulkana,
Healy Lake, Kenny
Lake, Lower Tonsina,
McCarthy, Mentasta
Lake, Nabesna,
Northway, Slana,
Tanacross, Tazlina,
Tetlin, Tok,
Tonsina, and those
individuals that
live along the Tok
Cutoff from Tok to
Mentasta Pass, and
along the Nabesna
Road.
Gulkana National Wild and Freshwater fish.. Residents of
Scenic River. Cantwell, Chisana,
Chistochina,
Chitina, Copper
Center, Dot Lake,
Gakona, Gakona
Junction,
Glennallen, Gulkana,
Healy Lake, Kenny
Lake, Lower Tonsina,
McCarthy, Mentasta
Lake, Nabesna,
Northway, Paxson-
Sourdough, Slana,
Tanacross, Tazlina,
Tetlin, Tok,
Tonsina, and those
individuals that
live along the Tok
Cutoff from Tok to
Mentasta Pass, and
along the Nabesna
Road.
Waters of the Prince William Freshwater fish Residents of the
Sound Area, except for the (trout, char, Prince William Sound
Copper River drainage whitefish, Area, except those
upstream of Haley Creek. suckers, living in the Copper
grayling, and River drainage
burbot). upstream of Haley
Creek.
Chitina Subdistrict of the Salmon........... Residents of
Upper Copper River District. Cantwell,
Chickaloon, Chisana,
Chistochina,
Chitina, Copper
Center, Dot Lake,
Gakona, Gakona
Junction,
Glennallen, Gulkana,
Healy Lake, Kenny
Lake, Lower Tonsina,
McCarthy, Mentasta
Lake, Nabesna,
Northway, Paxson-
Sourdough, Slana,
Tanacross, Tazlina,
Tetlin, Tok,
Tonsina, and those
individuals that
live along the Tok
Cutoff from Tok to
Mentasta Pass, and
along the Nabesna
Road.
Glennallen Subdistrict of the Salmon........... Residents of the
Upper Copper River District. Prince William Sound
Area and residents
of Cantwell,
Chickaloon, Chisana,
Dot Lake, Healy
Lake, Northway,
Tanacross, Tetlin,
Tok, and those
individuals living
along the Alaska
Highway from the
Alaskan/Canadian
border to Dot Lake,
along the Tok Cutoff
from Tok to Mentasta
Pass, and along the
Nabesna Road.
[[Page 73439]]
Waters of the Copper River Salmon........... Residents of Mentasta
between National Park Service Lake and Dot Lake.
regulatory markers located
near the mouth of Tanada
Creek, and in Tanada Creek
between National Park Service
regulatory markers
identifying the open waters
of the creek.
Remainder of the Prince Salmon........... Residents of the
William Sound Area. Prince William Sound
Area.
Waters of the Bering River Eulachon......... Residents of Cordova.
area from Point Martin to
Cape Suckling.
Waters of the Copper River Eulachon......... Residents of Cordova,
Delta from the Eyak River to Chenega Bay, and
Point Martin. Tatitlek.
YAKUTAT AREA:
Fresh water upstream from Salmon........... Residents of the area
the terminus of streams east of Yakutat Bay,
and rivers of the Yakutat including the
Area from the Doame River islands within
to the Tsiu River. Yakutat Bay, west of
the Situk River
drainage, and south
of and including
Knight Island.
Fresh water upstream from Dolly Varden, Residents of the area
the terminus of streams steelhead trout, east of Yakutat Bay,
and rivers of the Yakutat and smelt. including the
Area from the Doame River islands within
to Point Manby. Yakutat Bay, west of
the Situk River
drainage, and south
of and including
Knight Island.
Remainder of the Yakutat Dolly Varden, Residents of
Area. trout, smelt, Southeastern Alaska
and eulachon. and Yakutat Areas.
SOUTHEASTERN ALASKA AREA:
District 1--Section 1E in Salmon, Dolly Residents of the City
waters of the Naha River Varden, trout, of Saxman.
and Roosevelt Lagoon. smelt, and
eulachon.
District 1--Section 1F in Salmon, Dolly Residents of the City
Boca de Quadra in waters Varden, trout, of Saxman.
of Sockeye Creek and Hugh smelt, and
Smith Lake within 500 eulachon.
yards of the terminus of
Sockeye Creek.
Districts 2, 3, and 5 and Salmon, Dolly Residents living
waters draining into those Varden, trout, south of Sumner
Districts. smelt, and Strait and west of
eulachon. Clarence Strait and
Kashevaroff Passage.
District 5--North of a Salmon, Dolly Residents of the City
line from Point Barrie to Varden, trout, of Kake and in
Boulder Point. smelt, and Kupreanof Island
eulachon. drainages emptying
into Keku Strait
south of Point White
and north of the
Portage Bay boat
harbor.
District 6 and waters Salmon, Dolly Residents of the
draining into that Varden, trout, living south of
District. smelt, and Sumner Strait and
eulachon. west of Clarence
Strait and
Kashevaroff Passage;
residents of
drainages flowing
into District 6
north of the
latitude of Point
Alexander (Mitkof
Island); residents
of drainages flowing
into Districts 7 &
8, including the
communities of
Petersburg &
Wrangell; and
residents of the
communities of
Meyers Chuck and
Kake.
District 7 and waters Salmon, Dolly Residents of
draining into that Varden, trout, drainages flowing
District. smelt, and into District 6
eulachon. north of the
latitude of Point
Alexander (Mitkof
Island); residents
of drainages flowing
into Districts 7 &
8, including the
communities of
Petersburg &
Wrangell; and
residents of the
communities of
Meyers Chuck and
Kake.
District 8 and waters Salmon, Dolly Residents of
draining into that Varden, trout, drainages flowing
District. smelt, and into Districts 7 &
eulachon. 8, residents of
drainages flowing
into District 6
north of the
latitude of Point
Alexander (Mitkof
Island), and
residents of Meyers
Chuck.
District 9--Section 9A.... Salmon, Dolly Residents of the City
Varden, trout, of Kake and in
smelt, and Kupreanof Island
eulachon. drainages emptying
into Keku Strait
south of Point White
and north of the
Portage Bay boat
harbor.
District 9--Section 9B Salmon, Dolly Residents of the City
north of the latitude of Varden, trout, of Kake and in
Swain Point. smelt, and Kupreanof Island
eulachon. drainages emptying
into Keku Strait
south of Point White
and north of the
Portage Bay boat
harbor.
District 10--West of a Salmon, Dolly Residents of the City
line from Pinta Point to Varden, trout, of Kake and in
False Point Pybus. smelt, and Kupreanof Island
eulachon. drainages emptying
into Keku Strait
south of Point White
and north of the
Portage Bay boat
harbor.
District 12--South of a Salmon, Dolly Residents of the City
line from Fishery Point Varden, trout, of Angoon and along
to south Passage Point smelt, and the western shore of
and north of the latitude eulachon. Admiralty Island
of Point Caution. north of the
latitude of Sand
Island, south of the
latitude of Thayer
Creek, and west of
134[deg]30' West
longitude, including
Killisnoo Island.
District 13--Section 13A Salmon, Dolly Residents of the City
south of the latitude of Varden, trout, and Borough of Sitka
Cape Edward. smelt, and in drainages that
eulachon. empty into Section
13B north of the
latitude of Dorothy
Narrows.
District 13--Section 13B Salmon, Dolly Residents of the City
north of the latitude of Varden, trout, and Borough of Sitka
Redfish Cape. smelt, and in drainages that
eulachon. empty into Section
13B north of the
latitude of Dorothy
Narrows.
[[Page 73440]]
District 13--Section 13C.. Salmon, Dolly Residents of the City
Varden, trout, and Borough of Sitka
smelt, and in drainages that
eulachon. empty into Section
13B north of the
latitude of Dorothy
Narrows.
District 13--Section 13C Salmon, Dolly Residents of the City
east of the longitude of Varden, trout, of Angoon and along
Point Elizabeth. smelt, and the western shore of
eulachon. Admiralty Island
north of the
latitude of Sand
Island, south of the
latitude of Thayer
Creek, and west of
134[deg]30' West
longitude, including
Killisnoo Island.
District 14--Section 14B Salmon, Dolly Residents of the City
and 14C. Varden, trout, of Hoonah and in
smelt, and Chichagof Island
eulachon. drainages on the
eastern shore of
Port Frederick from
Gartina Creek to
Point Sophia.
Remainder of the Southeastern Dolly Varden, Residents of
Alaska Area. trout, smelt, Southeastern Alaska
and eulachon. and Yakutat Areas.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
Subpart D--Subsistence Taking of Fish and Wildlife
0
3. In subpart D of 36 CFR part 242 and 50 CFR part 100, Sec. ----.25
is revised to read as follows:
Sec. ----.25 Subsistence taking of fish, wildlife, and shellfish:
general regulations.
(a) Definitions. The following definitions apply to all regulations
contained in this part:
Abalone iron means a flat device which is used for taking abalone
and which is more than 1 inch (24 mm) in width and less than 24 inches
(610 mm) in length, with all prying edges rounded and smooth.
ADF&G means the Alaska Department of Fish and Game.
Airborne means transported by aircraft.
Aircraft means any kind of airplane, glider, or other device used
to transport people or equipment through the air, excluding
helicopters.
Airport means an airport listed in the Federal Aviation
Administration's Alaska Airman's Guide and chart supplement.
Anchor means a device used to hold a fishing vessel or net in a
fixed position relative to the beach; this includes using part of the
seine or lead, a ship's anchor, or being secured to another vessel or
net that is anchored.
Animal means those species with a vertebral column (backbone).
Antler means one or more solid, horn-like appendages protruding
from the head of a caribou, deer, elk, or moose.
Antlered means any caribou, deer, elk, or moose having at least one
visible antler.
Antlerless means any caribou, deer, elk, or moose not having
visible antlers attached to the skull.
Bait means any material excluding a scent lure that is placed to
attract an animal by its sense of smell or taste; however, those parts
of legally taken animals that are not required to be salvaged and which
are left at the kill site are not considered bait.
Beach seine means a floating net which is designed to surround fish
and is set from and hauled to the beach.
Bear means black bear, or brown or grizzly bear.
Big game means black bear, brown bear, bison, caribou, Sitka black-
tailed deer, elk, mountain goat, moose, musk ox, Dall sheep, wolf, and
wolverine.
Bow means a longbow, recurve bow, or compound bow, excluding a
crossbow or any bow equipped with a mechanical device that holds arrows
at full draw.
Broadhead means an arrowhead that is not barbed and has two or more
steel cutting edges having a minimum cutting diameter of not less than
seven-eighths of an inch.
Brow tine means a tine on the front portion of a moose antler,
typically projecting forward from the base of the antler toward the
nose.
Buck means any male deer.
Bull means any male moose, caribou, elk, or musk oxen.
Calf means a moose, caribou, elk, musk ox, or bison less than 12
months old.
Cast net means a circular net with a mesh size of no more than 1\1/
2\ inches and weights attached to the perimeter, which, when thrown,
surrounds the fish and closes at the bottom when retrieved.
Char means the following species: Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinis),
lake trout (Salvelinus namaycush), brook trout (Salvelinus fontinalis),
and Dolly Varden (Salvelinus malma).
Closed season means the time when fish, wildlife, or shellfish may
not be taken.
Crab means the following species: red king crab (Paralithodes
camshatica), blue king crab (Paralithodes platypus), brown king crab
(Lithodes aequispina), scarlet king crab (Lithodes couesi), all species
of tanner or snow crab (Chionoecetes spp.), and Dungeness crab (Cancer
magister).
Cub bear means a brown or grizzly bear in its first or second year
of life, or a black bear (including cinnamon and blue phases) in its
first year of life.
Depth of net means the perpendicular distance between cork line and
lead line expressed as either linear units of measure or as a number of
meshes, including all of the web of which the net is composed.
Designated hunter or fisherman means a Federally qualified hunter
or fisherman who may take all or a portion of another Federally
qualified hunter's or fisherman's harvest limit(s) only under
situations approved by the Board.
Dip net means a bag-shaped net supported on all sides by a rigid
frame; the maximum straight-line distance between any two points on the
net frame, as measured through the net opening, may not exceed 5 feet;
the depth of the bag must be at least one-half of the greatest
straight-line distance, as measured through the net opening; no portion
of the bag may be constructed of webbing that exceeds a stretched
measurement of 4.5 inches; the frame must be attached to a single rigid
handle and be operated by hand.
Diving gear means any type of hard hat or skin diving equipment,
including SCUBA equipment; a tethered, umbilical, surface-supplied
unit; or snorkel.
Drainage means all of the lands and waters comprising a watershed,
including tributary rivers, streams, sloughs, ponds, and lakes, which
contribute to the water supply of the watershed.
Drift gillnet means a drifting gillnet that has not been
intentionally staked, anchored, or otherwise fixed in one place.
Edible meat means the breast meat of ptarmigan and grouse, and,
those parts of caribou, deer, elk, mountain goat, moose, musk oxen, and
Dall sheep that are typically used for human consumption, which are:
the meat of the ribs, neck, brisket, front quarters as far as the
distal (bottom) joint of the radius-
[[Page 73441]]
ulna (knee), hindquarters as far as the distal joint (bottom) of the
tibia-fibula (hock) and that portion of the animal between the front
and hindquarters; however, edible meat of species listed in this
definition does not include: meat of the head, meat that has been
damaged and made inedible by the method of taking, bones, sinew, and
incidental meat reasonably lost as a result of boning or close trimming
of the bones, or viscera. For black bear, brown and grizzly bear,
``edible meat'' means the meat of the front quarter and hindquarters
and meat along the backbone (backstrap).
Federally qualified subsistence user means a rural Alaska resident
qualified to harvest fish or wildlife on Federal public lands in
accordance with the Federal Subsistence Management Regulations in this
part.
Field means an area outside of established year-round dwellings,
businesses, or other developments usually associated with a city, town,
or village; field does not include permanent hotels or roadhouses on
the State road system or at State or Federally maintained airports.
Fifty-inch (50-inch) moose means a bull moose with an antler spread
of 50 inches or more.
Fish wheel means a fixed, rotating device, with no more than four
baskets on a single axle, for catching fish, which is driven by river
current or other means.
Fresh water of streams and rivers means the line at which fresh
water is separated from salt water at the mouth of streams and rivers
by a line drawn headland to headland across the mouth as the waters
flow into the sea.
Full curl horn means the horn of a Dall sheep ram; the tip of which
has grown through 360 degrees of a circle described by the outer
surface of the horn, as viewed from the side, or that both horns are
broken, or that the sheep is at least 8 years of age as determined by
horn growth annuli.
Furbearer means a beaver, coyote, arctic fox, red fox, lynx,
marten, mink, weasel, muskrat, river (land) otter, red squirrel, flying
squirrel, ground squirrel, marmot, wolf, or wolverine.
Fyke net means a fixed, funneling (fyke) device used to entrap
fish.
Gear means any type of fishing apparatus.
Gillnet means a net primarily designed to catch fish by
entanglement in a mesh that consists of a single sheet of webbing which
hangs between cork line and lead line, and which is fished from the
surface of the water.
Grappling hook means a hooked device with flukes or claws, which is
attached to a line and operated by hand.
Groundfish or bottomfish means any marine fish except halibut,
osmerids, herring and salmonids.
Grouse collectively refers to all species found in Alaska,
including spruce grouse, ruffed grouse, blue grouse, and sharp-tailed
grouse.
Hand purse seine means a floating net which is designed to surround
fish and which can be closed at the bottom by pursing the lead line;
pursing may only be done by hand power, and a free-running line through
one or more rings attached to the lead line is not allowed.
Handicraft means a finished product made by a rural Alaskan
resident from the nonedible byproducts of fish or wildlife and is
composed wholly or in some significant respect of natural materials.
The shape and appearance of the natural material must be substantially
changed by the skillful use of hands, such as sewing, weaving,
drilling, lacing, beading, carving, etching, scrimshawing, painting, or
other means, and incorporated into a work of art, regalia, clothing, or
other creative expression, and can be either traditional or
contemporary in design. The handicraft must have substantially greater
monetary and aesthetic value than the unaltered natural material alone.
Handline means a hand-held and operated line, with one or more
hooks attached.
Hare or hares collectively refers to all species of hares (commonly
called rabbits) in Alaska and includes snowshoe hare and tundra hare.
Harvest limit means the number of any one species permitted to be
taken by any one person or designated group, per specified time period,
in a Unit or portion of a Unit in which the taking occurs even if part
or all of the harvest is preserved. A fish, when landed and killed by
means of rod and reel, becomes part of the harvest limit of the person
originally hooking it.
Herring pound means an enclosure used primarily to contain live
herring over extended periods of time.
Highway means the drivable surface of any constructed road.
Household means that group of people residing in the same
residence.
Hung measure means the maximum length of the cork line when
measured wet or dry with traction applied at one end only.
Hunting means the taking of wildlife within established hunting
seasons with archery equipment or firearms, and as authorized by a
required hunting license.
Hydraulic clam digger means a device using water or a combination
of air and water used to harvest clams.
Jigging gear means a line or lines with lures or baited hooks,
drawn through the water by hand, and which are operated during periods
of ice cover from holes cut in the ice, or from shore ice and which are
drawn through the water by hand.
Lead means either a length of net employed for guiding fish into a
seine, set gillnet, or other length of net, or a length of fencing
employed for guiding fish into a fish wheel, fyke net, or dip net.
Legal limit of fishing gear means the maximum aggregate of a single
type of fishing gear permitted to be used by one individual or boat, or
combination of boats in any particular regulatory area, district, or
section.
Long line means either a stationary, buoyed, or anchored line, or a
floating, free-drifting line with lures or baited hooks attached.
Marmot collectively refers to all species of marmot that occur in
Alaska, including the hoary marmot, Alaska marmot, and the woodchuck.
Mechanical clam digger means a mechanical device used or capable of
being used for the taking of clams.
Mechanical jigging machine means a mechanical device with line and
hooks used to jig for halibut and bottomfish, but does not include hand
gurdies or rods with reels.
Mile means a nautical mile when used in reference to marine waters
or a statute mile when used in reference to fresh water.
Motorized vehicle means a motor-driven land, air, or water
conveyance.
Open season means the time when wildlife may be taken by hunting or
trapping; an open season includes the first and last days of the
prescribed season period.
Otter means river or land otter only, excluding sea otter.
Permit hunt means a hunt for which State or Federal permits are
issued by registration or other means.
Poison means any substance that is toxic or poisonous upon contact
or ingestion.
Possession means having direct physical control of wildlife at a
given time or having both the power and intention to exercise dominion
or control of wildlife either directly or through another person or
persons.
Possession limit means the maximum number of fish, grouse, or
ptarmigan a person or designated group may have in possession if the
they have not been canned, salted, frozen, smoked, dried, or otherwise
preserved so as to be fit for
[[Page 73442]]
human consumption after a 15-day period.
Pot means a portable structure designed and constructed to capture
and retain live fish and shellfish in the water.
Ptarmigan collectively refers to all species found in Alaska,
including white-tailed ptarmigan, rock ptarmigan, and willow ptarmigan.
Purse seine means a floating net which is designed to surround fish
and which can be closed at the bottom by means of a free-running line
through one or more rings attached to the lead line.
Ram means a male Dall sheep.
Registration permit means a permit that authorizes hunting and is
issued to a person who agrees to the specified hunting conditions.
Hunting permitted by a registration permit begins on an announced date
and continues throughout the open season, or until the season is closed
by Board action. Registration permits are issued in the order
applications are received and/or are based on priorities as determined
by 50 CFR 100.17 and 36 CFR 242.17.
Regulatory year means July 1--June 30, except for fish and
shellfish, for which it means April 1--March 31.
Ring net means a bag-shaped net suspended between no more than two
frames; the bottom frame may not be larger in perimeter than the top
frame; the gear must be nonrigid and collapsible so that free movement
of fish or shellfish across the top of the net is not prohibited when
the net is employed.
Rockfish means all species of the genus Sebastes.
Rod and reel means either a device upon which a line is stored on a
fixed or revolving spool and is deployed through guides mounted on a
flexible pole, or a line that is attached to a pole. In either case,
bait or an artificial fly or lure is used as terminal tackle. This
definition does not include the use of rod and reel gear for snagging.
Salmon means the following species: pink salmon (Oncorhynchus
gorbuscha); sockeye salmon (Oncorhynchus nerka); Chinook salmon
(Oncorhynchus tshawytscha); coho salmon (Oncorhynchus kisutch); and
chum salmon (Oncorhynchus keta).
Salmon stream means any stream used by salmon for spawning,
rearing, or for traveling to a spawning or rearing area.
Salvage means to transport the edible meat, skull, or hide, as
required by regulation, of a regulated fish, wildlife, or shellfish to
the location where the edible meat will be consumed by humans or
processed for human consumption in a manner which saves or prevents the
edible meat from waste, and preserves the skull or hide for human use.
Scallop dredge means a dredge-like device designed specifically for
and capable of taking scallops by being towed along the ocean floor.
Sea urchin rake means a hand-held implement, no longer than 4 feet,
equipped with projecting prongs used to gather sea urchins.
Sealing means placing a mark or tag on a portion of a harvested
animal by an authorized representative of the ADF&G; sealing includes
collecting and recording information about the conditions under which
the animal was harvested, and measurements of the specimen submitted
for sealing or surrendering a specific portion of the animal for
biological information.
Set gillnet means a gillnet that has been intentionally set,
staked, anchored, or otherwise fixed.
Seven-eighths curl horn means the horn of a male Dall sheep, the
tip of which has grown through seven-eights (315 degrees) of a circle,
described by the outer surface of the horn, as viewed from the side, or
with both horns broken.
Shovel means a hand-operated implement for digging clams.
Skin, hide, pelt, or fur means any tanned or untanned external
covering of an animal's body. However, for bear, the skin, hide, pelt,
or fur means the external covering with claws attached.
Snagging means hooking or attempting to hook a fish elsewhere than
in the mouth.
Spear means a shaft with a sharp point or fork-like implement
attached to one end, which is used to thrust through the water to
impale or retrieve fish, and which is operated by hand.
Spike-fork moose means a bull moose with only one or two tines on
either antler; male calves are not spike-fork bulls.
Stretched measure means the average length of any series of 10
consecutive meshes measured from inside the first knot and including
the last knot when wet; the 10 meshes, when being measured, must be an
integral part of the net, as hung, and measured perpendicular to the
selvages; measurements will be made by means of a metal tape measure
while the 10 meshes being measured are suspended vertically from a
single peg or nail, under 5-pound weight.
Subsistence fishing permit means a subsistence harvest permit
issued by the Alaska Department of Fish and Game or the Federal
Subsistence Board.
Take or Taking means to fish, pursue, hunt, shoot, trap, net,
capture, collect, kill, harm, or attempt to engage in any such conduct.
Tine or antler point refers to any point on an antler, the length
of which is greater than its width and is at least one inch.
To operate fishing gear means any of the following: to deploy gear
in the water; to remove gear from the water; to remove fish or
shellfish from the gear during an open season or period; or to possess
a gillnet containing fish during an open fishing period, except that a
gillnet which is completely clear of the water is not considered to be
operating for the purposes of minimum distance requirement.
Transportation means to ship, convey, carry, or transport by any
means whatever and deliver or receive for such shipment, conveyance,
carriage, or transportation.
Trapping means the taking of furbearers within established trapping
seasons and with a required trapping license.
Trawl means a bag-shaped net towed through the water to capture
fish or shellfish, and includes beam, otter, or pelagic trawl.
Troll gear means a power gurdy troll gear consisting of a line or
lines with lures or baited hooks which are drawn through the water by a
power gurdy; hand troll gear consisting of a line or lines with lures
or baited hooks which are drawn through the water from a vessel by hand
trolling, strip fishing, or other types of trolling, and which are
retrieved by hand power or hand-powered crank and not by any type of
electrical, hydraulic, mechanical, or other assisting device or
attachment; or dinglebar troll gear consisting of one or more lines,
retrieved and set with a troll gurdy or hand troll gurdy, with a
terminally attached weight from which one or more leaders with one or
more lures or baited hooks are pulled through the water while a vessel
is making way.
Trophy means a mount of a big game animal, including the skin of
the head (cape) or the entire skin, in a lifelike representation of the
animal, including a lifelike representation made from any part of a big
game animal; ``trophy'' also includes a ``European mount'' in which the
horns or antlers and the skull or a portion of the skull are mounted
for display.
Trout means the following species: cutthroat trout (Oncorhynchus
clarki) and rainbow/steelhead trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss).
Unclassified wildlife or unclassified species means all species of
animals not otherwise classified by the definitions
[[Page 73443]]
in this paragraph (a), or regulated under other Federal law as listed
in paragraph (i) of this section.
Ungulate means any species of hoofed mammal, including deer,
caribou, elk, moose, mountain goat, Dall sheep, and musk oxen.
Unit and Subunit means one of the geographical areas in the State
of Alaska known as Game Management Units, or GMUs, as defined in the
codified Alaska Department of Fish and Game regulations found in Title
5 of the Alaska Administrative Code and collectively listed in this
part as Units or Subunits.
Wildlife means any hare, ptarmigan, grouse, ungulate, bear,
furbearer, or unclassified species and includes any part, product, egg,
or offspring thereof, or carcass or part thereof.
(b) Taking fish, wildlife, or shellfish for subsistence uses by a
prohibited method is a violation of this part. Seasons are closed
unless opened by Federal regulation. Hunting, trapping, or fishing
during a closed season or in an area closed by this part is prohibited.
You may not take for subsistence fish, wildlife, or shellfish outside
established Unit or Area seasons, or in excess of the established Unit
or Area harvest limits, unless otherwise provided for by the Board. You
may take fish, wildlife, or shellfish under State regulations on public
lands, except as otherwise restricted at Sec. Sec. ----.26 through --
--.28. Unit/Area-specific restrictions or allowances for subsistence
taking of fish, wildlife, or shellfish are identified at Sec. Sec. --
--.26 through ----.28.
(c) Harvest limits. (1) Harvest limits authorized by this section
and harvest limits established in State regulations may not be
accumulated.
(2) Fish, wildlife, or shellfish taken by a designated individual
for another person pursuant to Sec. ----.10(d)(5)(ii) counts toward
the individual harvest limit of the person for whom the fish, wildlife,
or shellfish is taken.
(3) A harvest limit applies to the number of fish, wildlife, or
shellfish that can be taken during a regulatory year; however, harvest
limits for grouse, ptarmigan, and caribou (in some Units) are regulated
by the number that may be taken per day. Harvest limits of grouse and
ptarmigan are also regulated by the number that can be held in
possession.
(4) Unless otherwise provided, any person who gives or receives
fish, wildlife, or shellfish must furnish, upon a request made by a
Federal or State agent, a signed statement describing the following:
names and addresses of persons who gave and received fish, wildlife, or
shellfish; the time and place that the fish, wildlife, or shellfish was
taken; and identification of species transferred. Where a qualified
subsistence user has designated another qualified subsistence user to
take fish, wildlife, or shellfish on his or her behalf in accordance
with Sec. ----.10(d)(5)(ii), the permit must be furnished in place of
a signed statement.
(d) Fishing by designated harvest permit. (1) Any species of fish
that may be taken by subsistence fishing under this part may be taken
under a designated harvest permit.
(2) If you are a Federally qualified subsistence user, you
(beneficiary) may designate another Federally qualified subsistence
user to take fish on your behalf. The designated fisherman must obtain
a designated harvest permit prior to attempting to harvest fish and
must return a completed harvest report. The designated fisherman may
fish for any number of beneficiaries but may have no more than two
harvest limits in his/her possession at any one time.
(3) The designated fisherman must have in possession a valid
designated fishing permit when taking, attempting to take, or
transporting fish taken under this section, on behalf of a beneficiary.
(4) The designated fisherman may not fish with more than one legal
limit of gear.
(5) You may not designate more than one person to take or attempt
to take fish on your behalf at one time. You may not personally take or
attempt to take fish at the same time that a designated fisherman is
taking or attempting to take fish on your behalf.
(e) Hunting by designated harvest permit. In Units 1-8, 9D, 10-16,
and 18-26, if you are a Federally qualified subsistence user
(recipient), you may designate another Federally qualified subsistence
user to take deer, moose and caribou on your behalf unless you are a
member of a community operating under a community harvest system or
unless unit-specific regulations in Sec. ----.26 preclude or modify
the use of the designated hunter system or allow the harvest of
additional species by a designated hunter. The designated hunter must
obtain a designated hunter permit and must return a completed harvest
report. The designated hunter may hunt for any number of recipients but
may have no more than two harvest limits in his/her possession at any
one time, unless otherwise specified in unit-specific regulations in
Sec. ----.26.
(f) A rural Alaska resident who has been designated to take fish,
wildlife, or shellfish on behalf of another rural Alaska resident in
accordance with Sec. ----.10(d)(5)(ii) must promptly deliver the fish,
wildlife, or shellfish to that rural Alaska resident and may not charge
the recipient for his/her services in taking the fish, wildlife, or
shellfish or claim for themselves the meat or any part of the harvested
fish, wildlife, or shellfish.
(g) [Reserved].
(h) Permits. If a subsistence fishing or hunting permit is required
by this part, the following permit conditions apply unless otherwise
specified in this section:
(1) You may not take more fish, wildlife, or shellfish for
subsistence use than the limits set out in the permit;
(2) You must obtain the permit prior to fishing or hunting;
(3) You must have the permit in your possession and readily
available for inspection while fishing, hunting, or transporting
subsistence-taken fish, wildlife, or shellfish;
(4) If specified on the permit, you must keep accurate daily
records of the harvest, showing the number of fish, wildlife, or
shellfish taken, by species, location and date of harvest, and other
such information as may be required for management or conservation
purposes; and
(5) If the return of harvest information necessary for management
and conservation purposes is required by a permit and you fail to
comply with such reporting requirements, you are ineligible to receive
a subsistence permit for that activity during the following regulatory
year, unless you demonstrate that failure to report was due to loss in
the mail, accident, sickness, or other unavoidable circumstances.
(i) You may not possess, transport, give, receive, or barter fish,
wildlife, or shellfish that was taken in violation of Federal or State
statutes or a regulation promulgated hereunder.
(j) Utilization of fish, wildlife, or shellfish. (1) You may not
use wildlife as food for a dog or furbearer, or as bait, except as
allowed for in Sec. ----.26, Sec. ----.27, or Sec. ----.28, or
except for the following:
(i) The hide, skin, viscera, head, or bones of wildlife;
(ii) The skinned carcass of a furbearer;
(iii) Squirrels, hares (rabbits), grouse, or ptarmigan; however,
you may not use the breast meat of grouse and ptarmigan as animal food
or bait;
(iv) Unclassified wildlife.
(2) If you take wildlife for subsistence, you must salvage the
following parts for human use:
(i) The hide of a wolf, wolverine, coyote, fox, lynx, marten, mink,
weasel, or otter;
(ii) The hide and edible meat of a brown bear, except that the hide
of brown bears taken in Units 5, 9B, 17, 18, portions of 19A and 19B,
21D, 22, 23, 24, and 26A need not be salvaged;
[[Page 73444]]
(iii) The hide and edible meat of a black bear;
(iv) The hide or meat of squirrels, hares, marmots, beaver,
muskrats, or unclassified wildlife.
(3) You must salvage the edible meat of ungulates, bear, grouse,
and ptarmigan.
(4) You may not intentionally waste or destroy any subsistence-
caught fish or shellfish; however, you may use for bait or other
purposes whitefish, herring, and species for which bag limits, seasons,
or other regulatory methods and means are not provided in this section,
as well as the head, tail, fins, and viscera of legally taken
subsistence fish.
(5) Failure to salvage the edible meat may not be a violation if
such failure is caused by circumstances beyond the control of a person,
including theft of the harvested fish, wildlife, or shellfish,
unanticipated weather conditions, or unavoidable loss to another
animal.
(6) If you are a Federally qualified subsistence user, you may sell
handicraft articles made from the skin, hide, pelt, or fur, including
claws, of a black bear.
(i) In Units 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5, you may sell handicraft articles
made from the skin, hide, pelt, fur, claws, bones, teeth, sinew, or
skulls of a black bear taken from Units 1, 2, 3, or 5.
(ii) [Reserved].
(7) If you are a Federally qualified subsistence user, you may sell
handicraft articles made from the skin, hide, pelt, or fur, including
claws, of a brown bear taken from Units 1-5, 9A-C, 9E, 12, 17, 20, or
25.
(i) In Units 1, 2, 3, 4, and 5, you may sell handicraft articles
made from the skin, hide, pelt, fur, claws, bones, teeth, sinew, or
skulls of a brown bear taken from Units 1, 4, or 5.
(ii) [Reserved].
(8) If you are a Federally qualified subsistence user, you may sell
the raw fur or tanned pelt with or without claws attached from legally
harvested furbearers.
(9) If you are a Federally qualified subsistence user, you may sell
handicraft articles made from the nonedible byproducts (including, but
not limited to, skin, shell, fins, and bones) of subsistence-harvested
fish or shellfish.
(10) If you are a Federally qualified subsistence user, you may
sell handicraft articles made from nonedible byproducts of wildlife
harvested for subsistence uses (excluding bear), to include; skin,
hide, pelt, fur, claws, bones (except skulls of moose, caribou, elk,
deer, sheep, goat and musk ox), teeth, sinew, antlers and/or horns (if
not attached to any part of the skull or made to represent a big game
trophy) and hooves.
(11) The sale of handicrafts made from the nonedible byproducts of
wildlife, when authorized in this part, may not constitute a
significant commercial enterprise.
(12) You may sell the horns and antlers not attached to any part of
the skull from legally harvested caribou (except caribou harvested in
Unit 23), deer, elk, goat, moose, musk ox, and sheep.
(13) You may sell the raw/untanned and tanned hide or cape from a
legally harvested caribou, deer, elk, goat, moose, musk ox, and sheep.
(k) The regulations found in this part do not apply to the
subsistence taking and use of fish, wildlife, or shellfish regulated
pursuant to the Fur Seal Act of 1966 (80 Stat. 1091, 16 U.S.C. 1187);
the Endangered Species Act of 1973 (87 Stat. 884, 16 U.S.C. 1531-1543);
the Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 (86 Stat. 1027; 16 U.S.C.
1361-1407); and the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (40 Stat. 755; 16 U.S.C.
703-711), or to any amendments to these Acts. The taking and use of
fish, wildlife, or shellfish, covered by these Acts, will conform to
the specific provisions contained in these Acts, as amended, and any
implementing regulations.
(l) Rural residents, nonrural residents, and nonresidents not
specifically prohibited by Federal regulations from fishing, hunting,
or trapping on public lands in an area may fish, hunt, or trap on
public lands in accordance with the appropriate State regulations.
4. In subpart D of 36 CFR part 242 and 50 CFR part 100, Sec. --
--.26 is added to read as follows:
Sec. ----.26 Subsistence taking of wildlife.
(a) You may take wildlife for subsistence uses by any method,
except as prohibited in this section or by other Federal statute.
Taking wildlife for subsistence uses by a prohibited method is a
violation of this part. Seasons are closed unless opened by Federal
regulation. Hunting or trapping during a closed season or in an area
closed by this part is prohibited.
(b) Except for special provisions found at paragraphs (n)(1)
through (26) of this section, the following methods and means of taking
wildlife for subsistence uses are prohibited:
(1) Shooting from, on, or across a highway;
(2) Using any poison;
(3) Using a helicopter in any manner, including transportation of
individuals, equipment, or wildlife; however, this prohibition does not
apply to transportation of an individual, gear, or wildlife during an
emergency rescue operation in a life-threatening situation;
(4) Taking wildlife from a motorized land or air vehicle when that
vehicle is in motion, or from a motor-driven boat when the boat's
progress from the motor's power has not ceased;
(5) Using a motorized vehicle to drive, herd, or molest wildlife;
(6) Using or being aided by use of a machine gun, set gun, or a
shotgun larger than 10 gauge;
(7) Using a firearm other than a shotgun, muzzle-loaded rifle,
rifle, or pistol using center-firing cartridges, for the taking of
ungulates, bear, wolves, or wolverine, except that--
(i) An individual in possession of a valid trapping license may use
a firearm that shoots rimfire cartridges to take wolves and wolverine;
(ii) Only a muzzle-loading rifle of .54-caliber or larger, or a
.45-caliber muzzle-loading rifle with a 250-grain, or larger, elongated
slug may be used to take brown bear, black bear, elk, moose, musk ox,
and mountain goat;
(8) Using or being aided by use of a pit, fire, artificial light,
radio communication, artificial salt lick, explosive, barbed arrow,
bomb, smoke, chemical, conventional steel trap with a jaw spread over 9
inches, or conibear style trap with a jaw spread over 11 inches;
(9) Using a snare, except that an individual in possession of a
valid hunting license may use nets and snares to take unclassified
wildlife, ptarmigan, grouse, or hares; and, individuals in possession
of a valid trapping license may use snares to take furbearers;
(10) Using a trap to take ungulates or bear;
(11) Using hooks to physically snag, impale, or otherwise take
wildlife; however, hooks may be used as a trap drag;
(12) Using a crossbow to take ungulates, bear, wolf, or wolverine
in any area restricted to hunting by bow and arrow only;
(13) Taking of ungulates, bear, wolf, or wolverine with a bow,
unless the bow is capable of casting an inch-wide broadhead-tipped
arrow at least 175 yards horizontally, and the arrow and broadhead
together weigh at least 1 ounce (437.5 grains);
(14) Using bait for taking ungulates, bear, wolf, or wolverine;
except, you may use bait to take wolves and wolverine with a trapping
license, and you may use bait to take black bears with a hunting
license as authorized in Unit-specific regulations at paragraphs (n)(1)
through (26) of this section.
[[Page 73445]]
Baiting of black bears is subject to the following restrictions:
(i) Before establishing a black bear bait station, you must
register the site with ADF&G;
(ii) When using bait, you must clearly mark the site with a sign
reading ``black bear bait station'' that also displays your hunting
license number and ADF&G-assigned number;
(iii) You may use only biodegradable materials for bait; you may
use only the head, bones, viscera, or skin of legally harvested fish
and wildlife for bait;
(iv) You may not use bait within \1/4\ mile of a publicly
maintained road or trail;
(v) You may not use bait within 1 mile of a house or other
permanent dwelling, or within 1 mile of a developed campground or
developed recreational facility;
(vi) When using bait, you must remove litter and equipment from the
bait station site when done hunting;
(vii) You may not give or receive payment for the use of a bait
station, including barter or exchange of goods;
(viii) You may not have more than two bait stations with bait
present at any one time;
(15) Taking swimming ungulates, bears, wolves, or wolverine;
(16) Taking or assisting in the taking of ungulates, bear, wolves,
wolverine, or other furbearers before 3:00 a.m. following the day in
which airborne travel occurred (except for flights in regularly
scheduled commercial aircraft); however, this restriction does not
apply to subsistence taking of deer, the setting of snares or traps, or
the removal of furbearers from traps or snares;
(17) Taking a bear cub or a sow accompanied by cub(s).
(c) Wildlife taken in defense of life or property is not a
subsistence use; wildlife so taken is subject to State regulations.
(d) The following methods and means of trapping furbearers for
subsistence uses pursuant to the requirements of a trapping license are
prohibited, in addition to the prohibitions listed at paragraph (b) of
this section:
(1) Disturbing or destroying a den, except that you may disturb a
muskrat pushup or feeding house in the course of trapping;
(2) Disturbing or destroying any beaver house;
(3) Taking beaver by any means other than a steel trap or snare,
except that you may use firearms in certain Units with established
seasons as identified in Unit-specific regulations found in this
subpart;
(4) Taking otter with a steel trap having a jaw spread of less than
5\7/8\ inches during any closed mink and marten season in the same
Unit;
(5) Using a net or fish trap (except a blackfish or fyke trap);
(6) Taking or assisting in the taking of furbearers by firearm
before 3:00 a.m. on the day following the day on which airborne travel
occurred; however, this does not apply to a trapper using a firearm to
dispatch furbearers caught in a trap or snare.
(e) Possession and transportation of wildlife. (1) Except as
specified in paragraphs (e)(2) or (f)(1) of this section, or as
otherwise provided, you may not take a species of wildlife in any unit,
or portion of a unit, if your total take of that species already
obtained anywhere in the State under Federal and State regulations
equals or exceeds the harvest limit in that unit.
(2) An animal taken under Federal or State regulations by any
member of a community with an established community harvest limit for
that species counts toward the community harvest limit for that
species. Except for wildlife taken pursuant to Sec. ----.10(d)(5)(iii)
or as otherwise provided for by this part, an animal taken as part of a
community harvest limit counts toward every community member's harvest
limit for that species taken under Federal or State of Alaska
regulations.
(f) Harvest limits. (1) The harvest limit specified for a trapping
season for a species and the harvest limit set for a hunting season for
the same species are separate and distinct. This means that if you have
taken a harvest limit for a particular species under a trapping season,
you may take additional animals under the harvest limit specified for a
hunting season or vice versa.
(2) A brown/grizzly bear taken in a Unit or portion of a Unit
having a harvest limit of ``one brown/grizzly bear per year'' counts
against a ``one brown/grizzly bear every four regulatory years''
harvest limit in other Units. You may not take more than one brown/
grizzly bear in a regulatory year.
(3) The Assistant Regional Director for Subsistence Management,
FWS, is authorized to open, close, or adjust Federal subsistence lynx
seasons and to set harvest and possession limits for lynx in Units 6,
7, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 20A, 20B, 20C east of the Teklanika River,
20D, and 20E, with a maximum season of November 1-February 28. This
delegation may be exercised only when it is necessary to conserve lynx
populations or to continue subsistence uses, only within guidelines
listed within the ADF&G Lynx Harvest Management Strategy, and only
after staff analysis of the potential action, consultation with the
appropriate Regional Council Chairs, and Interagency Staff Committee
concurrence.
(g) Evidence of sex and identity. (1) If subsistence take of Dall
sheep is restricted to a ram, you may not possess or transport a
harvested sheep unless both horns accompany the animal.
(2) If the subsistence taking of an ungulate, except sheep, is
restricted to one sex in the local area, you may not possess or
transport the carcass of an animal taken in that area unless sufficient
portions of the external sex organs remain attached to indicate
conclusively the sex of the animal, except that in Units 1-5 antlers
are also considered proof of sex for deer if the antlers are naturally
attached to an entire carcass, with or without the viscera; and except
in Units 11, 13, 19, 21, and 24, where you may possess either
sufficient portions of the external sex organs (still attached to a
portion of the carcass) or the head (with or without antlers attached;
however, the antler stumps must remain attached) to indicate the sex of
the harvested moose; however, this paragraph (g)(2) does not apply to
the carcass of an ungulate that has been butchered and placed in
storage or otherwise prepared for consumption upon arrival at the
location where it is to be consumed.
(3) If a moose harvest limit requires an antlered bull, an antler
size, or configuration restriction, you may not possess or transport
the moose carcass or its parts unless both antlers accompany the
carcass or its parts. If you possess a set of antlers with less than
the required number of brow tines on one antler, you must leave the
antlers naturally attached to the unbroken, uncut skull plate; however,
this paragraph (g)(3) does not apply to a moose carcass or its parts
that have been butchered and placed in storage or otherwise prepared
for consumption after arrival at the place where it is to be stored or
consumed.
(h) Removing harvest from the field. You must leave all edible meat
on the bones of the front quarters and hind quarters of caribou and
moose harvested in Units 9B, 17, 18, and 19B prior to October 1 until
you remove the meat from the field or process it for human consumption.
You must leave all edible meat on the bones of the front quarters, hind
quarters, and ribs of moose harvested in Unit 21 prior to October 1
until you remove the meat from the field or process it for human
consumption. You must leave all edible meat on the bones of the front
quarters, hind quarters, and ribs of caribou and moose harvested in
Unit 24 prior to October 1 until you remove the meat from the field
[[Page 73446]]
or process it for human consumption. Meat of the front quarters, hind
quarters, or ribs from a harvested moose or caribou may be processed
for human consumption and consumed in the field; however, meat may not
be removed from the bones for purposes of transport out of the field.
(i) Returning of tags, marks, or collars. If you take an animal
that has been marked or tagged for scientific studies, you must, within
a reasonable time, notify the ADF&G or the agency identified on the
collar or marker when and where the animal was taken. You also must
retain any ear tag, collar, radio, tattoo, or other identification with
the hide until it is sealed, if sealing is required; in all cases, you
must return any identification equipment to the ADF&G or to an agency
identified on such equipment.
(j) Sealing of bear skins and skulls. (1) Sealing requirements for
bear apply to brown bears taken in all Units, except as specified in
this paragraph, and black bears of all color phases taken in Units 1-7,
11-17, and 20.
(2) You may not possess or transport from Alaska the untanned skin
or skull of a bear unless the skin and skull have been sealed by an
authorized representative of ADF&G in accordance with State or Federal
regulations, except that the skin and skull of a brown bear taken under
a registration permit in Units 5, 9B, 9E, 17, 18, 19A and 19B
downstream of and including the Aniak River drainage, 21D, 22, 23, 24,
and 26A need not be sealed unless removed from the area.
(3) You must keep a bear skin and skull together until a
representative of the ADF&G has removed a rudimentary premolar tooth
from the skull and sealed both the skull and the skin; however, this
provision does not apply to brown bears taken within Units 5, 9B, 9E,
17, 18, 19A and 19B downstream of and including the Aniak River
drainage, 21D, 22, 23, 24, and 26A and which are not removed from the
Unit.
(i) In areas where sealing is required by Federal regulations, you
may not possess or transport the hide of a bear that does not have the
penis sheath or vaginal orifice naturally attached to indicate
conclusively the sex of the bear.
(ii) If the skin or skull of a bear taken in Units 9B, 17, 18, and
19A and 19B downstream of and including the Aniak River drainage is
removed from the area, you must first have it sealed by an ADF&G
representative in Bethel, Dillingham, or McGrath; at the time of
sealing, the ADF&G representative must remove and retain the skin of
the skull and front claws of the bear.
(iii) If you remove the skin or skull of a bear taken in Units 21D,
22, 23, 24, and 26A from the area or present it for commercial tanning
within the area, you must first have it sealed by an ADF&G
representative in Barrow, Galena, Nome, or Kotzebue; at the time of
sealing, the ADF&G representative must remove and retain the skin of
the skull and front claws of the bear.
(iv) If you remove the skin or skull of a bear taken in Unit 5 from
the area, you must first have it sealed by an ADF&G representative in
Yakutat.
(v) If you remove the skin or skull of a bear taken in Unit 9E from
Unit 9, you must first have it sealed by an authorized sealing
representative. At the time of sealing, the representative must remove
and retain the skin of the skull and front claws of the bear.
(4) You may not falsify any information required on the sealing
certificate or temporary sealing form provided by the ADF&G in
accordance with State regulations.
(k) Sealing of beaver, lynx, marten, otter, wolf, and wolverine.
You may not possess or transport from Alaska the untanned skin of a
marten taken in Units 1-5, 7, 13E, or 14-16 or the untanned skin of a
beaver, lynx, otter, wolf, or wolverine, whether taken inside or
outside the State, unless the skin has been sealed by an authorized
representative in accordance with State or Federal regulations.
(1) In Unit 18, you must obtain an ADF&G seal for beaver skins only
if they are to be sold or commercially tanned.
(2) In Unit 2, you must seal any wolf taken on or before the 30th
day after the date of taking.
(l) If you take a species listed in paragraph (k) of this section
but are unable to present the skin in person, you must complete and
sign a temporary sealing form and ensure that the completed temporary
sealing form and skin are presented to an authorized representative of
ADF&G for sealing consistent with requirements listed in paragraph (k)
of this section.
(m) You may take wildlife, outside of established season or harvest
limits, for food in traditional religious ceremonies, that are part of
a funerary or mortuary cycle, including memorial potlatches, under the
following provisions:
(1) The harvest does not violate recognized principles of wildlife
conservation and uses the methods and means allowable for the
particular species published in the applicable Federal regulations. The
appropriate Federal land manager will establish the number, species,
sex, or location of harvest, if necessary, for conservation purposes.
Other regulations relating to ceremonial harvest may be found in the
unit-specific regulations in Sec. ----.26(n).
(2) No permit or harvest ticket is required for harvesting under
this section; however, the harvester must be a Federally qualified
subsistence user with customary and traditional use in the area where
the harvesting will occur.
(3) In Units 1-26 (except for Koyukon/Gwich'in potlatch ceremonies
in Units 20F, 21, 24, or 25):
(i) A tribal chief, village or tribal council president, or the
chief's or president's designee for the village in which the religious/
cultural ceremony will be held, or a Federally qualified subsistence
user outside of a village or tribal-organized ceremony, must notify the
nearest Federal land manager that a wildlife harvest will take place.
The notification must include the species, harvest location, and number
of animals expected to be taken.
(ii) Immediately after the wildlife is taken, the tribal chief,
village or tribal council president or designee, or other Federally
qualified subsistence user must create a list of the successful hunters
and maintain these records, including the name of the decedent for whom
the ceremony will be held. If requested, this information must be
available to an authorized representative of the Federal land manager.
(iii) The tribal chief, village or tribal council president or
designee, or other Federally qualified subsistence user outside of the
village in which the religious/cultural ceremony will be held must
report to the Federal land manager the harvest location, species, sex,
and number of animals taken as soon as practicable, but not more than
15 days after the wildlife is taken.
(4) In Units 20F, 21, 24, and 25 (for Koyukon/Gwich'in potlatch
ceremonies only):
(i) Taking wildlife outside of established season and harvest
limits is authorized if it is for food for the traditional Koyukon/
Gwich'in Potlatch Funerary or Mortuary ceremony and if it is consistent
with conservation of healthy populations.
(ii) Immediately after the wildlife is taken, the tribal chief,
village or tribal council president, or the chief's or president's
designee for the village in which the religious ceremony will be held
must create a list of the successful hunters and maintain these
records. The list must be made available, after the harvest is
completed, to a Federal land manager upon request.
(iii) As soon as practical, but not more than 15 days after the
harvest, the tribal chief, village council president, or designee must
notify the Federal land
[[Page 73447]]
manager about the harvest location, species, sex, and number of animals
taken.
(n) Unit regulations. You may take for subsistence unclassified
wildlife, all squirrel species, and marmots in all Units, without
harvest limits, for the period of July 1-June 30. Unit-specific
restrictions or allowances for subsistence taking of wildlife are
identified at paragraphs (n)(1) through (26) of this section.
(1) Unit 1. Unit 1 consists of all mainland drainages from Dixon
Entrance to Cape Fairweather, and those islands east of the center line
of Clarence Strait from Dixon Entrance to Caamano Point, and all
islands in Stephens Passage and Lynn Canal north of Taku Inlet:
(i) Unit 1A consists of all drainages south of the latitude of
Lemesurier Point including all drainages into Behm Canal, excluding all
drainages of Ernest Sound;
(ii) Unit 1B consists of all drainages between the latitude of
Lemesurier Point and the latitude of Cape Fanshaw including all
drainages of Ernest Sound and Farragut Bay, and including the islands
east of the center lines of Frederick Sound, Dry Strait (between
Sergief and Kadin Islands), Eastern Passage, Blake Channel (excluding
Blake Island), Ernest Sound, and Seward Passage;
(iii) Unit 1C consists of that portion of Unit 1 draining into
Stephens Passage and Lynn Canal north of Cape Fanshaw and south of the
latitude of Eldred Rock including Berners Bay, Sullivan Island, and all
mainland portions north of Chichagof Island and south of the latitude
of Eldred Rock, excluding drainages into Farragut Bay;
(iv) Unit 1D consists of that portion of Unit 1 north of the
latitude of Eldred Rock, excluding Sullivan Island and the drainages of
Berners Bay;
(v) In the following areas, the taking of wildlife for subsistence
uses is prohibited or restricted on public lands:
(A) Public lands within Glacier Bay National Park are closed to all
taking of wildlife for subsistence uses;
(B) Unit 1A--in the Hyder area, the Salmon River drainage
downstream from the Riverside Mine, excluding the Thumb Creek drainage,
is closed to the taking of bear;
(C) Unit 1B--the Anan Creek drainage within 1 mile of Anan Creek
downstream from the mouth of Anan Lake, including the area within a 1-
mile radius from the mouth of Anan Creek Lagoon, is closed to the
taking of bear;
(D) Unit 1C:
(1) You may not hunt within one-fourth mile of Mendenhall Lake, the
U.S. Forest Service Mendenhall Glacier Visitor's Center, and the
Center's parking area;
(2) You may not take mountain goat in the area of Mt. Bullard
bounded by the Mendenhall Glacier, Nugget Creek from its mouth to its
confluence with Goat Creek, and a line from the mouth of Goat Creek
north to the Mendenhall Glacier;
(vi) You may not trap furbearers for subsistence uses in Unit 1C,
Juneau area, on the following public lands:
(A) A strip within one-quarter mile of the mainland coast between
the end of Thane Road and the end of Glacier Highway at Echo Cove;
(B) That area of the Mendenhall Valley bounded on the south by the
Glacier Highway, on the west by the Mendenhall Loop Road and Montana
Creek Road and Spur Road to Mendenhall Lake, on the north by Mendenhall
Lake, and on the east by the Mendenhall Loop Road and Forest Service
Glacier Spur Road to the Forest Service Visitor Center;
(C) That area within the U.S. Forest Service Mendenhall Glacier
Recreation Area;
(D) A strip within one-quarter mile of the following trails as
designated on U.S. Geological Survey maps: Herbert Glacier Trail,
Windfall Lake Trail, Peterson Lake Trail, Spaulding Meadows Trail
(including the loop trail), Nugget Creek Trail, Outer Point Trail, Dan
Moller Trail, Perseverance Trail, Granite Creek Trail, Mt. Roberts
Trail and Nelson Water Supply Trail, Sheep Creek Trail, and Point
Bishop Trail;
(vii) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) You may hunt black bear with bait in Units 1A, 1B, and 1D
between April 15 and June 15;
(B) You may not shoot ungulates, bear, wolves, or wolverine from a
boat, unless you are certified as disabled.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear: 2 bears, no more than Sept. 1-June 30.
one may be a blue or glacier bear.
Brown Bear: 1 bear every four Sept. 15-Dec. 31.
regulatory years by State Mar. 15-May 31.
registration permit only.
Deer:
Unit 1A--4 antlered deer........ Aug. 1-Dec. 31.
Unit 1B--2 antlered deer........ Aug. 1-Dec. 31.
Unit 1C--4 deer; however, Aug. 1-Dec. 31.
antlerless deer may be taken
only from Sept. 15-Dec. 31.
Goat:
Unit 1A--Revillagigedo Island No open season.
only.
Unit 1B--that portion north of Aug. 1-Dec. 31.
LeConte Bay--1 goat by State
registration permit only; the
taking of kids or nannies
accompanied by kids is
prohibited.
Unit 1A and Unit 1B--that No open season.
portion on the Cleveland
Peninsula south of the divide
between Yes Bay and Santa Anna
Inlet.
Unit 1A and Unit 1B--remainder-- Aug. 1-Dec. 31.
2 goats; a State registration
permit will be required for the
taking of the first goat and a
Federal registration permit for
the taking of a second goat.
The taking of kids or nannies
accompanied by kids is
prohibited.
Unit 1C--that portion draining Oct. 1-Nov. 30.
into Lynn Canal and Stephens
Passage between Antler River
and Eagle Glacier and River,
and all drainages of the
Chilkat Range south of the
Endicott River--1 goat by State
registration permit only.
Unit 1C--that portion draining No open season.
into Stephens Passage and Taku
Inlet between Eagle Glacier and
River and Taku Glacier.
Unit 1C--remainder--1 goat by Aug. 1-Nov. 30.
State registration permit only.
Unit 1D--that portion lying Sept. 15-Nov. 30.
north of the Katzehin River and
northeast of the Haines
highway--1 goat by State
registration permit only.
Unit 1D--that portion lying No open season.
between Taiya Inlet and River
and the White Pass and Yukon
Railroad.
Unit 1D--remainder--1 goat by Aug. 1-Dec. 31.
State registration permit only.
Moose:
Unit 1A-1 antlered bull by Sept. 5-Oct. 15.
Federal registration permit.
[[Page 73448]]
Unit 1B-1 antlered bull with Sept. 15-Oct. 15.
spike-fork or 50-inch antlers
or 3 or more brow tines on
either antler, by State
registration permit only. The
Petersburg District Ranger is
authorized to close the season
based on conservation concerns,
in consultation with ADF&G and
the Chair of the Southeast
Alaska Subsistence Regional
Advisory Council.
Unit 1C--that portion south of Sept. 15-Oct. 15.
Point Hobart including all Port
Houghton drainages--1 antlered
bull with spike-fork or 50-inch
antlers or 3 or more brow tines
on either antler, by State
registration permit only.
Unit 1C--remainder, excluding Sept. 15-Oct. 15.
drainages of Berners Bay--1
antlered bull by State
registration permit only.
Unit 1D......................... No open season.
Coyote: 2 coyotes................... Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black, Nov. 1-Feb. 15.
and Silver Phases): 2 foxes.
Hare (Snowshoe): 5 hares per day.... Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Lynx: lynx.......................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Wolf: 5 wolves...................... Aug. 1-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: 1 wolverine.............. Nov. 10-Feb. 15.
Grouse (Spruce, Blue, and Ruffed): 5 Aug. 1-May 15.
per day, 10 in possession.
Ptarmigan (Rock, Willow, and White- Aug. 1-May 15.
tailed): 20 per day, 40 in
possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver: Unit 1--No limit............ Dec. 1-May 15.
Coyote: No limit.................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black, Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
and Silver Phases): No limit.
Lynx: No limit...................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Marten: No limit.................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Mink and Weasel: No limit........... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Muskrat: No limit................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Otter: No limit..................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Wolf: No limit...................... Nov. 10-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: No limit................. Nov. 10-Apr. 30.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(2) Unit 2. Unit 2 consists of Prince of Wales Island and all
islands west of the center lines of Clarence Strait and Kashevarof
Passage, south and east of the center lines of Sumner Strait, and east
of the longitude of the westernmost point on Warren Island.
(i) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) You may use bait to hunt black bear between April 15 and June
15;
(B) You may not shoot ungulates, bear, wolves, or wolverine from a
boat, unless you are certified as disabled.
(ii) [Reserved]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear: 2 bears, no more than Sept. 1-June 30.
one may be a blue or glacier bear.
Deer:
5 deer; however, no more than July 24-Dec. 31.
one may be an antlerless deer.
Antlerless deer may be taken
only during the period Oct. 15--
Federal/State harvest report.
The Tongass National Forest
Supervisor is authorized to
reduce the harvest to 4 deer
based on conservation concerns,
in consultation with ADF&G and
the Chair of the Southeast
Alaska Subsistence Regional
Advisory Council.
The Federal public lands on
Prince of Wales Island,
excluding the southeast portion
(lands south of the West Arm of
Cholmondeley Sound draining
into Cholmondeley Sound or
draining eastward into Clarence
Strait), are closed to hunting
of deer from Aug. 1 to Aug. 15,
except by Federally qualified
subsistence users hunting under
these regulations.
Coyote: 2 coyotes................... Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black, Nov. 1-Feb. 15.
and Silver Phases): 2 foxes.
Hare (Snowshoe): 5 hares per day.... Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Lynx: 2 lynx........................ Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Wolf: 5 wolves. The Tongass National Sept. 1-Mar. 31.
Forest Supervisor (or designee) may
close the Federal hunting and
trapping season in consultation
with ADF&G and the Chair of the
Southeast Alaska Subsistence
Regional Advisory Council, when the
combined Federal-State harvest
quota is reached.
Wolverine: 1 wolverine.............. Nov. 10-Feb. 15.
Grouse (Spruce and Ruffed): 5 per Aug. 1-May 15.
day, 10 in possession.
Ptarmigan (Rock, Willow, and White- Aug. 1-May 15.
tailed): 20 per day, 40 in
possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver: No limit.................... Dec. 1-May 15.
Coyote: No limit.................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black, Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
and Silver Phases): No limit.
Lynx: No limit...................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Marten: No limit.................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Mink and Weasel: No limit........... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Muskrat: No limit................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Otter: No limit..................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
[[Page 73449]]
Wolf: No limit. The Tongass National Nov. 15-Mar. 31.
Forest Supervisor (or designee) may
close the Federal hunting and
trapping season in consultation
with ADF&G and the Chair of the
Southeast Alaska Subsistence
Regional Advisory Council, when the
combined Federal-State harvest
quota is reached. Any wolf taken in
Unit 2 must be sealed within 30
days of harvest.
Wolverine: No limit................. Nov. 10-Apr. 30.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(3) Unit 3.
(i) Unit 3 consists of all islands west of Unit 1B, north of Unit
2, south of the center line of Frederick Sound, and east of the center
line of Chatham Strait including Coronation, Kuiu, Kupreanof, Mitkof,
Zarembo, Kashevaroff, Woronkofski, Etolin, Wrangell, and Deer Islands.
(ii) In the following areas, the taking of wildlife for subsistence
uses is prohibited or restricted on public lands:
(A) In the Petersburg vicinity, you may not take ungulates, bear,
wolves, and wolverine along a strip one-fourth mile wide on each side
of the Mitkof Highway from Milepost 0 to Crystal Lake campground;
(B) You may not take black bears in the Petersburg Creek drainage
on Kupreanof Island;
(C) You may not hunt in the Blind Slough draining into Wrangell
Narrows and a strip one-fourth mile wide on each side of Blind Slough,
from the hunting closure markers at the southernmost portion of Blind
Island to the hunting closure markers one mile south of the Blind
Slough bridge.
(iii) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) You may use bait to hunt black bear between April 15 and June
15;
(B) You may not shoot ungulates, bear, wolves, or wolverine from a
boat, unless you are certified as disabled.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear: 2 bears, no more than Sept. 1-June 30.
one may be a blue or glacier bear.
Deer:...............................
Unit 3--Mitkof, Woewodski, and Oct. 15-Oct. 31.
Butterworth Islands--1 antlered
deer.
Unit 3--remainder--2 antlered Aug. 1-Nov. 30.
deer.
Moose: 1 antlered bull with spike- Sept. 15-Oct. 15.
fork or 50-inch antlers or 3 or
more brow tines on either antler by
State registration permit only. The
Petersburg District Ranger is
authorized to close the season
based on conservation concerns, in
consultation with ADF&G and the
Chair of the Southeast Alaska
Subsistence Regional Advisory
Council.
Coyote: 2 coyotes................... Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black, Nov. 1-Feb. 15.
and Silver Phases): 2 foxes.
Hare (Snowshoe): 5 hares per day.... Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Lynx: 2 lynx........................ Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Wolf: 5 wolves...................... Aug. 1-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: 1 wolverine.............. Nov. 10-Feb. 15.
Grouse (Spruce, Blue, and Ruffed): 5 Aug. 1-May 15.
per day, 10 in possession.
Ptarmigan (Rock, Willow, and White- Aug. 1-May 15.
tailed): 20 per day, 40 in
possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver:
Unit 3--Mitkof Island-No limit.. Dec. 1-Apr. 15.
Unit 3--except Mitkof Island-No Dec. 1-May 15.
limit.
Coyote: No limit.................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black, Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
and Silver Phases): No limit.
Lynx: No limit...................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Marten: No limit.................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Mink and Weasel: No limit........... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Muskrat: No limit................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Otter: No limit..................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Wolf: No limit...................... Nov. 10-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: No limit................. Nov. 10-Apr. 30.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(4) Unit 4. (i) Unit 4 consists of all islands south and west of
Unit 1C and north of Unit 3 including Admiralty, Baranof, Chichagof,
Yakobi, Inian, Lemesurier, and Pleasant Islands.
(ii) In the following areas, the taking of wildlife for subsistence
uses is prohibited or restricted on public lands:
(A) You may not take brown bears in the Seymour Canal Closed Area
(Admiralty Island) including all drainages into northwestern Seymour
Canal between Staunch Point and the southernmost tip of the unnamed
peninsula separating Swan Cove and King Salmon Bay including Swan and
Windfall Islands;
(B) You may not take brown bears in the Salt Lake Closed Area
(Admiralty Island) including all lands within one-fourth mile of Salt
Lake above Klutchman Rock at the head of Mitchell Bay;
(C) You may not take brown bears in the Port Althorp Closed Area
(Chichagof Island), that area within the Port Althorp watershed south
of a line from Point Lucan to Salt Chuck Point (Trap Rock);
(D) You may not use any motorized land vehicle for brown bear
hunting in the Northeast Chichagof Controlled Use Area (NECCUA)
consisting of all portions of Unit 4 on Chichagof Island north of
Tenakee Inlet and east of the drainage divide from the northwest point
of Gull Cove to Port Frederick Portage, including all drainages into
Port Frederick and Mud Bay.
[[Page 73450]]
(iii) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) You may shoot ungulates from a boat. You may not shoot bear,
wolves, or wolverine from a boat, unless you are certified as disabled;
(B) Five Federal registration permits will be issued by the Sitka
or Hoonah District Ranger for the taking of brown bear for educational
purposes associated with teaching customary and traditional subsistence
harvest and use practices. Any bear taken under an educational permit
does not count in an individual's one bear every four regulatory years
limit.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Brown Bear:.........................
Unit 4--Chichagof Island south Sept. 15-Dec. 31.
and west of a line that follows Mar. 15-May 31.
the crest of the island from
Rock Point (58[deg] N. lat.,
136[deg] 21[deg] W. long.) to
Rodgers Point (57[deg] 35[deg]
N. lat., 135[deg] 33[deg] W.
long.) including Yakobi and
other adjacent islands; Baranof
Island south and west of a line
which follows the crest of the
island from Nismeni Point
(57[deg] 34[deg] N. lat.,
135[deg] 25[deg] W. long.) to
the entrance of Gut Bay
(56[deg] 44[deg] N. lat.
134[deg] 38[deg] W. long.)
including the drainages into
Gut Bay and including Kruzof
and other adjacent islands--1
bear every four regulatory
years by State registration
permit only.
Unit 4--remainder--1 bear every Sept. 15-Dec. 31.
four regulatory years by State Mar. 15-May 20.
registration permit only.
Deer: 6 deer; however, antlerless Aug. 1-Jan. 31.
deer may be taken only from Sept.
15-Jan. 31.
Goat: 1 goat by State registration Aug. 1-Dec. 31.
permit only.
Coyote: 2 coyotes................... Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black, Nov. 1-Feb. 15.
and Silver Phases): 2 foxes.
Hare (Snowshoe): 5 hares per day.... Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Lynx: 2 lynx........................ Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Wolf: 5 wolves...................... Aug. 1-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: 1 wolverine.............. Nov. 10-Feb. 15.
Grouse (Spruce, Blue, and Ruffed): 5 Aug. 1-May 15.
per day, 10 in possession.
Ptarmigan (Rock, Willow, and White- Aug. 1-May 15.
tailed): 20 per day, 40 in
possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver: Unit 4--No limit............ Dec. 1-May 15.
Coyote: No limit.................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black, Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
and Silver Phases): No limit.
Lynx: No limit...................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Marten: No limit.................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Mink and Weasel: No limit........... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Muskrat: No limit................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Otter: No limit..................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Wolf: No limit...................... Nov. 10-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: No limit................. Nov. 10-Apr. 30.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(5) Unit 5. (i) Unit 5 consists of all Gulf of Alaska drainages and
islands between Cape Fairweather and the center line of Icy Bay,
including the Guyot Hills:
(A) Unit 5A consists of all drainages east of Yakutat Bay,
Disenchantment Bay, and the eastern edge of Hubbard Glacier, and
includes the islands of Yakutat and Disenchantment Bays;
(B) Unit 5B consists of the remainder of Unit 5.
(ii) You may not take wildlife for subsistence uses on public lands
within Glacier Bay National Park.
(iii) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) You may use bait to hunt black bear between April 15 and June
15;
(B) You may not shoot ungulates, bear, wolves, or wolverine from a
boat, unless you are certified as disabled;
(C) You may hunt brown bear in Unit 5 with a Federal registration
permit in lieu of a State metal locking tag if you have obtained a
Federal registration permit prior to hunting.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear:
2 bears, no more than one may be Sept. 1-June 30.
a blue or glacier bear.
Brown Bear:
1 bear by Federal registration Sept. 1-May 31.
permit only.
Deer:
Unit 5A--1 buck................. Nov. 1-Nov. 30.
Unit 5B......................... No open season.
Goat:
Unit 5A--that area between the Aug. 1-Jan. 31.
Hubbard Glacier and the West
Nunatak Glacier on the north
and east sides of Nunatak
Fjord--1 goat by Federal
registration permit. The U.S.
Forest Service Yakutat District
Ranger and ADF&G will jointly
announce the harvest quota
prior to the season. A minimum
of two goats in the harvest
quota will be reserved for
Federally qualified subsistence
users. The season will be
closed by local announcement
from the U.S. Forest Service
Yakutat District Ranger when
the quota has been taken. The
harvest quota and season
announcements will be made in
consultation with The National
Park Service and local
residents.
[[Page 73451]]
Unit 5A--remainder--1 goat by Aug. 1-Jan. 31.
Federal registration permit.
The U.S. Forest Service Yakutat
District Ranger and ADF&G will
jointly announce the harvest
quota prior to the season. A
minimum of four goats in the
harvest quota will be reserved
for Federally qualified
subsistence users. The season
will be closed by local
announcement when the quota has
been taken. The harvest quota
and season announcements will
be made in consultation with
The National Park Service and
local residents.
Unit 5B--1 goat by Federal
registration permit only.
Moose:
Unit 5A, Nunatak Bench--1 moose Nov. 15-Feb. 15.
by State registration permit
only. The season will be closed
when 5 moose have been taken
from the Nunatak Bench.
Unit 5A, except Nunatak Bench--1 Oct. 8-Nov. 15.
bull by joint State/Federal
registration permit only. The
season will be closed when 60
bulls have been taken from the
Unit. The season will be closed
in that portion west of the
Dangerous River when 30 bulls
have been taken in that area.
From Oct. 8-21, public lands
will be closed to taking of
moose, except by residents of
Unit 5A hunting under these
regulations.
Unit 5B--1 antlered bull by Sept. 1-Dec. 15.
State registration permit only.
The season will be closed when
25 antlered bulls have been
taken from the entirety of Unit
5B.
Coyote: 2 coyotes................... Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black and Nov. 1-Feb. 15.
Silver Phases): 2 foxes.
Hare (Snowshoe): 5 hares per day.... Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Lynx: 2 lynx........................ Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Wolf: 5 wolves...................... Aug. 1-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: 1 wolverine.............. Nov. 10-Feb. 15.
Grouse (Spruce and Ruffed): 5 per Aug. 1-May 15.
day, 10 in possession.
Ptarmigan (Rock, Willow, and White- Aug. 1-May 15.
tailed): 20 per day, 40 in
possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver: No limit.................... Nov. 10-May 15.
Coyote: No limit.................... Nov. 10-Feb. 15.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black and Nov 10-Feb. 15.
Silver Phases): No limit.
Lynx: No limit...................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Marten: No limit.................... Nov. 10-Feb. 15.
Mink and Weasel: No limit........... Nov. 10-Feb. 15.
Muskrat: No limit................... Dec. 1-Feb. 15.
Otter: No limit..................... Nov. 10-Feb. 15.
Wolf: No limit...................... Nov. 10-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: No limit................. Nov. 10-Apr. 30.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(6) Unit 6. (i) Unit 6 consists of all Gulf of Alaska and Prince
William Sound drainages from the center line of Icy Bay (excluding the
Guyot Hills) to Cape Fairfield including Kayak, Hinchinbrook, Montague,
and adjacent islands, and Middleton Island, but excluding the Copper
River drainage upstream from Miles Glacier, and excluding the Nellie
Juan and Kings River drainages:
(A) Unit 6A consists of Gulf of Alaska drainages east of Palm Point
near Katalla including Kanak, Wingham, and Kayak Islands;
(B) Unit 6B consists of Gulf of Alaska and Copper River Basin
drainages west of Palm Point near Katalla, east of the west bank of the
Copper River, and east of a line from Flag Point to Cottonwood Point;
(C) Unit 6C consists of drainages west of the west bank of the
Copper River, and west of a line from Flag Point to Cottonwood Point,
and drainages east of the east bank of Rude River and drainages into
the eastern shore of Nelson Bay and Orca Inlet;
(D) Unit 6D consists of the remainder of Unit 6.
(ii) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) You may use bait to hunt black bear between April 15 and June
15;
(B) You may take coyotes in Units 6B and 6C with the aid of
artificial lights;
(C) One permit will be issued by the Cordova District Ranger to the
Native Village of Eyak to take one bull moose from Federal lands in
Units 6B or C for their annual Memorial/Sobriety Day potlatch;
(D) A Federally qualified subsistence user (recipient) who is
either blind, 65 years of age or older, at least 70 percent disabled,
or temporarily disabled may designate another Federally qualified
subsistence user to take any moose, deer, black bear and beaver on his
or her behalf in Unit 6, unless the recipient is a member of a
community operating under a community harvest system. The designated
hunter must obtain a designated hunter permit and must return a
completed harvest report. The designated hunter may hunt for any number
of recipients, but may have no more than one harvest limit in his or
her possession at any one time;
(E) A hunter younger than 10 years old at the start of the hunt may
not be issued a Federal subsistence permit to harvest black bear, deer,
goat, moose, wolf, and wolverine;
(F) A hunter younger than 10 years old may harvest black bear,
deer, goat, moose, wolf, and wolverine under the direct, immediate
supervision of a licensed adult, at least 18 years old. The animal
taken is counted against the adult's harvest limit. The adult is
responsible for ensuring that all legal requirements are met.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear: 1 bear.................. Sept. 1-June 30.
Deer: 4 deer; however, antlerless Aug. 1-Dec. 31.
deer may be taken only from Oct. 1-
Dec. 31.
[[Page 73452]]
Goats:
Unit 6A and B--1 goat by State Aug. 20-Jan. 31.
registration permit only.
Unit 6C......................... No open season.
Unit 6D (subareas RG242, RG243, Aug. 20-Jan. 31.
RG244, RG249, RG266 and RG252
only)--1 goat by Federal
registration permit only. In
each of the Unit 6D subareas,
goat seasons will be closed by
the Cordova District Ranger
when harvest limits for that
subarea are reached. Harvest
quotas are as follows: RG242--2
goats, RG243--4 goats, RG244--2
goats, RG249--4 goats, RG266--4
goats, RG252--1 goat.
Moose:
Unit 6C--1 antlerless moose by Sept. 1-Oct. 31.
Federal registration permit
only.
Unit 6C--1 bull by Federal Sept. 1-Dec. 31.
registration permit only.
(In Unit 6C, only one moose ..................................
permit may be issued per
household. A household
receiving a State permit for
Unit 6C moose may not receive a
Federal permit. The annual
harvest quota will be announced
by the U.S. Forest Service,
Cordova Office, in consultation
with ADF&G. The Federal harvest
allocation will be 100% of the
antlerless moose permits and
75% of the bull permits.).
Unit 6--remainder............... No open season.
Beaver: 1 beaver per day, 1 in May 1-Oct. 31.
possession.
Coyote:
Unit 6A and D--2 coyotes........ Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Unit 6B and 6C--No limit........ July 1-June 30.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black and No open season.
Silver Phases):.
Hare (Snowshoe): No limit........... July 1-June 30.
Lynx: 2 lynx........................ Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Wolf: 5 wolves...................... Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: 1 wolverine.............. Sept. 1-Mar. 31.
Grouse (Spruce): 5 per day, 10 in Aug. 1-May 15.
possession.
Ptarmigan (Rock, Willow, and White- Aug. 1-May 15.
tailed): 20 per day, 40 in
possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver: No limit.................... Dec. 1-Apr. 30.
Coyote:
Unit 6C--south of the Copper Nov. 10-Apr. 30.
River Highway and east of the
Heney Range--No limit.
Unit 6A, B, C remainder, and D-- Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
No limit.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black and Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Silver Phases): No limit.
Marten: No limit.................... Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Mink and Weasel: No limit........... Nov. 10-Jan. 31.
Muskrat: No limit................... Nov. 10-June 10.
Otter: No limit..................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Wolf: No limit...................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Wolverine: No limit................. Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(7) Unit 7. (i) Unit 7 consists of Gulf of Alaska drainages between
Gore Point and Cape Fairfield including the Nellie Juan and Kings River
drainages, and including the Kenai River drainage upstream from the
Russian River, the drainages into the south side of Turnagain Arm west
of and including the Portage Creek drainage, and east of 150[deg] W.
long., and all Kenai Peninsula drainages east of 150[deg] W. long.,
from Turnagain Arm to the Kenai River.
(ii) In the following areas, the taking of wildlife for subsistence
uses is prohibited or restricted on public lands:
(A) You may not take wildlife for subsistence uses in the Kenai
Fjords National Park;
(B) You may not hunt in the Portage Glacier Closed Area in Unit 7,
which consists of Portage Creek drainages between the Anchorage-Seward
Railroad and Placer Creek in Bear Valley, Portage Lake, the mouth of
Byron Creek, Glacier Creek, and Byron Glacier; however, you may hunt
grouse, ptarmigan, hares, and squirrels with shotguns after September
1.
(iii) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) You may use bait to hunt black bear between April 15 and June
15; except in the drainages of Resurrection Creek and its tributaries.
(B) [Reserved]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear: Unit 7--3 bears......... July 1-June 30.
Moose:
Unit 7--that portion draining No open season.
into Kings Bay--Public lands
are closed to the taking of
moose by all users.
Unit 7--remainder............... No open season.
Beaver: 1 beaver per day, 1 in May 1-Oct. 10.
possession.
Coyote: No limit.................... Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black and Nov. 1-Feb. 15.
Silver Phases): 2 foxes.
Hare (Snowshoe): No limit........... July 1-June 30.
Lynx: 2 lynx........................ Nov. 10-Jan. 31.
Wolf:
Unit 7--that portion within the Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Kenai National Wildlife Refuge--
2 wolves.
Unit 7--Remainder--5 wolves..... Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
[[Page 73453]]
Wolverine: 1 wolverine.............. Sept. 1-Mar. 31.
Grouse (Spruce): 10 per day, 20 in Aug. 10-Mar. 31.
possession.
Grouse (Ruffled).................... No open season.
Ptarmigan (Rock, Willow, and White- Aug. 10-Mar. 31.
tailed): 20 per day, 40 in
possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver: 20 beaver per season........ Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Coyote: No limit.................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black and Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Silver Phases): No limit.
Marten: No limit.................... Nov. 10-Jan. 31.
Mink and Weasel: No limit........... Nov. 10-Jan. 31.
Muskrat: No limit................... Nov. 10-May 15.
Otter: No limit..................... Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Wolf: No limit...................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Wolverine: No limit................. Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(8) Unit 8. Unit 8 consists of all islands southeast of the
centerline of Shelikof Strait including Kodiak, Afognak, Whale,
Raspberry, Shuyak, Spruce, Marmot, Sitkalidak, Amook, Uganik, and
Chirikof Islands, the Trinity Islands, the Semidi Islands, and other
adjacent islands.
(i) If you have a trapping license, you may take beaver with a
firearm in Unit 8 from Nov. 10-Apr. 30.
(ii) [Reserved]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Brown Bear: 1 bear by Federal Dec. 1-Dec. 15.
registration permit only. Up to 1 Apr. 1-May 15.
permit may be issued in Akhiok; up
to 1 permit may be issued in
Karluk; up to 3 permits may be
issued in Larsen Bay; up to 2
permits may be issued in Old
Harbor; up to 2 permits may be
issued in Ouzinkie; and up to 2
permits may be issued in Port
Lions. Permits will be issued by
the Kodiak Refuge Manager.
Deer: Unit 8--all lands within the Aug. 1-Jan. 31.
Kodiak Archipelago within the
Kodiak National Wildlife Refuge,
including lands on Kodiak, Ban,
Uganik, and Afognak Islands--3
deer; however, antlerless deer may
be taken only from Oct. 1-Jan. 31.
Elk: Kodiak, Ban, Uganik, and Sept. 15-Nov. 30.
Afognak Islands--1 elk per
household by Federal registration
permit only. The season will be
closed by announcement of the
Refuge Manager, Kodiak National
Wildlife Refuge when the combined
Federal/State harvest reaches 15%
of the herd.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black and Sept. 1-Feb. 15.
Silver Phases): 2 foxes.
Hare (Snowshoe): No limit........... July 1-June 30.
Ptarmigan (Rock, Willow, and White- Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
tailed): 20 per day, 40 in
possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver: 30 beaver per season........ Nov. 10-Apr. 30.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black and Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Silver Phases): No limit.
Marten: No limit.................... Nov. 10-Jan. 31.
Mink and Weasel: No limit........... Nov. 10-Jan. 31.
Muskrat: No limit................... Nov. 10-June 10.
Otter: No limit..................... Nov. 10-Jan. 31.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(9) Unit 9. (i) Unit 9 consists of the Alaska Peninsula and
adjacent islands, including drainages east of False Pass, Pacific Ocean
drainages west of and excluding the Redoubt Creek drainage; drainages
into the south side of Bristol Bay, drainages into the north side of
Bristol Bay east of Etolin Point, and including the Sanak and Shumagin
Islands:
(A) Unit 9A consists of that portion of Unit 9 draining into
Shelikof Strait and Cook Inlet between the southern boundary of Unit 16
(Redoubt Creek) and the northern boundary of Katmai National Park and
Preserve;
(B) Unit 9B consists of the Kvichak River drainage except those
lands drained by the Kvichak River/Bay between the Alagnak River
drainage and the Naknek River drainage;
(C) Unit 9C consists of the Alagnak (Branch) River drainage, the
Naknek River drainage, lands drained by the Kvichak River/Bay between
the Alagnak River drainage and the Naknek River drainage, and all land
and water within Katmai National Park and Preserve;
(D) Unit 9D consists of all Alaska Peninsula drainages west of a
line from the southernmost head of Port Moller to the head of American
Bay, including the Shumagin Islands and other islands of Unit 9 west of
the Shumagin Islands;
(E) Unit 9E consists of the remainder of Unit 9.
(ii) In the following areas, the taking of wildlife for subsistence
uses is prohibited or restricted on public lands:
(A) You may not take wildlife for subsistence uses in Katmai
National Park;
(B) You may not use motorized vehicles, except aircraft, boats, or
snowmobiles used for hunting and transporting a hunter or harvested
animal parts from Aug. 1-Nov. 30 in the Naknek Controlled Use Area,
which includes all of Unit 9C within the Naknek River drainage upstream
from and including the King Salmon Creek drainage; however, you may use
a motorized vehicle on the Naknek-King Salmon, Lake Camp, and Rapids
Camp
[[Page 73454]]
roads and on the King Salmon Creek trail, and on frozen surfaces of the
Naknek River and Big Creek.
(iii) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) If you have a trapping license, you may use a firearm to take
beaver in Unit 9B from April 1-May 31 and in the remainder of Unit 9
from April 1-30;
(B) You may hunt brown bear by State registration permit in lieu of
a resident tag in Unit 9B, except that portion within the Lake Clark
National Park and Preserve, if you have obtained a State registration
permit prior to hunting.
(C) In Unit 9B, Lake Clark National Park and Preserve, residents of
Nondalton, Iliamna, Newhalen, Pedro Bay, and Port Alsworth may hunt
brown bear by Federal registration permit in lieu of a resident tag;
ten permits will be available with at least one permit issued in each
community; however, no more than five permits will be issued in a
single community. The season will be closed when four females or ten
bears have been taken, whichever occurs first. The permits will be
issued and closure announcements made by the Superintendent, Lake Clark
National Park and Preserve;
(D) Residents of Newhalen, Nondalton, Iliamna, Pedro Bay, and Port
Alsworth may take up to a total of 10 bull moose in Unit 9B for
ceremonial purposes, under the terms of a Federal registration permit
from July 1-June 30. Permits will be issued to individuals only at the
request of a local organization. This 10-moose limit is not cumulative
with that permitted for potlatches by the State;
(E) For Units 9C and 9E only, a Federally qualified subsistence
user (recipient) of Units 9C and 9E may designate another Federally
qualified subsistence user of Units 9C and 9E to take bull caribou on
his or her behalf unless the recipient is a member of a community
operating under a community harvest system. The designated hunter must
obtain a designated hunter permit and must return a completed harvest
report and turn over all meat to the recipient. There is no restriction
on the number of possession limits the designated hunter may have in
his/her possession at any one time;
(F) For Unit 9D, a Federally qualified subsistence user (recipient)
may designate another Federally qualified subsistence user to take
caribou on his or her behalf unless the recipient is a member of a
community operating under a community harvest system. The designated
hunter must obtain a designated hunter permit and must return a
completed harvest report. The designated hunter may hunt for any number
of recipients but may have no more than four harvest limits in his/her
possession at any one time;
(G) The communities of False Pass, King Cove, Cold Bay, Sand Point,
and Nelson Lagoon annually may each take, from October 1-December 31 or
May 10-25, one brown bear for ceremonial purposes, under the terms of a
Federal registration permit. A permit will be issued to an individual
only at the request of a local organization. The brown bear may be
taken from either Unit 9D or Unit 10 (Unimak Island) only;
(H) You may hunt brown bear in Unit 9E with a Federal registration
permit in lieu of a State locking tag if you have obtained a Federal
registration permit prior to hunting.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear: 3 bears................. July 1-June 30.
Brown Bear: ..................................
Unit 9B--Lake Clark National July 1-June 30.
Park and Preserve--Rural
residents of Nondalton,
Iliamna, Newhalen, Pedro Bay,
and Port Alsworth only --1 bear
by Federal registration permit
only.
Unit 9B, remainder--1 bear by Sept. 1-May 31.
State registration permit only.
Unit 9E--1 bear by Federal Sept. 25-Dec. 31.
registration permit. Apr. 15-May 25.
Caribou: ..................................
Unit 9A--4 caribou; however, no Aug. 10-Mar. 31.
more than 2 caribou may be
taken Aug. 10--Sept. 30 and no
more than 1 caribou may be
taken Oct. 1--Nov. 30.
Unit 9B--3 caribou; however, no July 1-Apr. 15.
more than 1 caribou may be
taken from July 1--Nov. 30.
Unit 9C, that portion within the Aug. 1-Mar. 31.
Alagnak River drainage--1
caribou.
Unit 9C--remainder--Federal ..................................
public lands are closed to the
taking of caribou.
Unit 9D--2 bulls by Federal Aug. 1-Sept. 30.
registration permit.
Unit 9E--Federal public lands Nov. 15-Mar. 31.
are closed to the taking of
caribou.
Sheep: ..................................
Unit 9B, that portion within July 15-Oct. 15.
Lake Clark National Park and Jan. 1-Apr. 1.
Preserve--1 ram with 3/4 curl
or larger horn by Federal
registration permit only. By
announcement of the Lake Clark
National Park and Preserve
Superintendent, the summer/fall
season will be closed when up
to 5 sheep are taken and the
winter season will be closed
when up to 2 sheep are taken.
Unit 9B--remainder--1 ram with 7/ Aug. 10-Oct. 10.
8 curl or larger horn by
Federal registration permit
only.
Unit 9--remainder--1 ram with 7/ Aug. 10-Sept. 20.
8 curl or larger horn.
Moose: ..................................
Unit 9A--1 bull................. Sept. 1-15.
Unit 9B--1 bull................. Aug. 20-Sept. 15.
Dec. 1-Jan. 15.
Unit 9C--that portion draining Sept. 1-15.
into the Naknek River from the Dec. 1-31.
north--1 bull.
Unit 9C--that portion draining Aug. 20-Sept. 15.
into the Naknek River from the Dec. 1-31.
south--1 bull by Federal
registration permit only.
Public lands are closed during
December for the hunting of
moose, except by Federally
qualified subsistence users
hunting under these regulations.
Unit 9C--remainder--1 bull...... Sept. 1-15.
Dec. 15-Jan. 15.
Unit 9D--1 bull by Federal Dec. 15-Jan. 20.
registration permit. Federal
public lands will be closed by
announcement of the Izembek
Refuge Manager to the harvest
of moose when a total of 10
bulls have been harvested
between State and Federal hunts.
Unit 9E--1 bull, however only Aug. 20-Sept. 20.
antlered bulls may be taken Dec. 1-Jan. 31.
Dec. 1-Jan. 31.
[[Page 73455]]
Beaver: Unit 9B and 9E--2 beaver per Apr. 15-May 31.
day.
Coyote: 2 coyotes................... Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Fox, Arctic (Blue and White): No Dec. 1-Mar. 15.
limit.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black and Sept. 1-Feb. 15.
Silver Phases): 2 foxes.
Hare (Snowshoe and Tundra): No limit July 1-June 30.
Lynx: 2 lynx........................ Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Wolf: 10 wolves..................... Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: 1 wolverine.............. Sept. 1-Mar. 31.
Grouse (Spruce): 15 per day, 30 in Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
possession.
Ptarmigan (Rock, Willow, and White- Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
tailed): 20 per day, 40 in
possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver: ..................................
No limit........................ Oct. 10-Mar. 31.
2 beaver per day; only firearms Apr. 15-May 31.
may be used.
Coyote: No limit.................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Fox, Arctic (Blue and White): No Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
limit.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black and Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Silver Phases): No limit.
Lynx: No limit...................... Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Marten: No limit.................... Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Mink and Weasel: No limit........... Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Muskrat: No limit................... Nov. 10-June 10.
Otter: No limit..................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Wolf: No limit...................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Wolverine: No limit................. Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(10) Unit 10. (i) Unit 10 consists of the Aleutian Islands, Unimak
Island, and the Pribilof Islands.
(ii) You may not take any wildlife species for subsistence uses on
Otter Island in the Pribilof Islands.
(iii) In Unit 10--Unimak Island only, a Federally qualified
subsistence user (recipient) may designate another Federally qualified
subsistence user to take caribou on his or her behalf unless the
recipient is a member of a community operating under a community
harvest system. The designated hunter must obtain a designated hunter
permit and must return a completed harvest report. The designated
hunter may hunt for any number of recipients but may have no more than
four harvest limits in his/her possession at any one time.
(iv) The communities of False Pass, King Cove, Cold Bay, Sand
Point, and Nelson Lagoon annually may each take, from October 1-
December 31 or May 10-25, one brown bear for ceremonial purposes, under
the terms of a Federal registration permit. A permit will be issued to
an individual only at the request of a local organization. The brown
bear may be taken from either Unit 9D or Unit 10 (Unimak Island) only.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Caribou:
Unit 10--Unimak Island only--4 Aug. 1-Sept. 30.
caribou by Federal registration Nov. 15-Mar. 31.
permit only.
Unit 10--remainder--No limit.... July 1-June 30.
Coyote: 2 coyotes................... Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Fox, Arctic (Blue and White Phase): July 1-June 30.
No limit.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black and Sept. 1-Feb. 15.
Silver Phases): 2 foxes.
Wolf: 5 wolves...................... Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: 1 wolverine.............. Sept. 1-Mar. 31.
Ptarmigan (Rock and Willow): 20 per Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
day, 40 in possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Coyote: 2 coyotes................... Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Fox, Arctic (Blue and White Phase): July 1-June 30.
No limit.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black and Sept. 1-Feb. 28.
Silver Phases): 2 foxes.
Mink and Weasel: No limit........... Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Muskrat: No limit................... Nov. 10-June 10.
Otter: No limit..................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Wolf: No limit...................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Wolverine: No limit................. Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(11) Unit 11. Unit 11 consists of that area draining into the
headwaters of the Copper River south of Suslota Creek and the area
drained by all tributaries into the east bank of the Copper River
[[Page 73456]]
between the confluence of Suslota Creek with the Slana River and Miles
Glacier.
(i) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) You may use bait to hunt black bear between April 15 and June
15;
(B) One moose without calf may be taken from June 20-July 31 in the
Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve in Unit 11 or 12 for the
Batzulnetas Culture Camp. Two hunters from either Chistochina or
Mentasta Village may be designated by the Mt. Sanford Tribal Consortium
to receive the Federal subsistence harvest permit. The permit may be
obtained from a Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve office.
(ii) A joint permit may be issued to a pair of a minor and an elder
to hunt sheep during the Sept. 21-Oct. 20 hunt. The following
conditions apply:
(A) The permittees must be a minor aged 8 to 15 years old and an
accompanying adult 60 years of age or older;
(B) Both the elder and the minor must be Federally qualified
subsistence users with a positive customary and traditional use
determination for the area they want to hunt;
(C) The minor must hunt under the direct immediate supervision of
the accompanying adult, who is responsible for ensuring that all legal
requirements are met;
(D) Only one animal may be harvested with this permit. The sheep
harvested will count against the harvest limits of both the minor and
accompanying adult.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear: 3 bears................. July 1-June 30.
Brown Bear: 1 bear.................. Aug. 10-June 15.
Caribou............................. No open season.
Sheep:
1 sheep......................... Aug. 10-Sept. 20.
1 sheep by Federal registration Sept. 21-Oct. 20.
permit only by persons 60 years
of age or older.
Goat: Unit 11--that portion within Aug. 25-Dec. 31.
the Wrangell-St. Elias National
Park and Preserve--1 goat by
Federal registration permit only.
Federal public lands will be closed
by announcement of the
Superintendent, Wrangell-St. Elias
National Park and Preserve to the
harvest of goats when a total of 45
goats have been harvested between
Federal and State hunts.
Moose: 1 antlered bull by Federal Aug 20-Sept. 20.
registration permit only.
Beaver: 1 beaver per day, 1 in June 1-Oct. 10.
possession.
Coyote: 10 coyotes.................. Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black and Sept. 1-Mar. 15.
Silver Phases): 10 foxes; however,
no more than 2 foxes may be taken
prior to Oct. 1.
Hare (Snowshoe): No limit........... July 1-June 30.
Lynx: 2 lynx........................ Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Wolf: 10 wolves..................... Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: 1 wolverine.............. Sept. 1-Jan. 31.
Grouse (Spruce, Ruffed, and Sharp- Aug. 10-Mar. 31.
tailed): 15 per day, 30 in
possession.
Ptarmigan (Rock, Willow, and White- Aug. 10-Mar. 31.
tailed): 20 per day, 40 in
possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver: 30 beaver per season........ Nov. 10-Apr. 30.
Coyote: No limit.................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black and Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Silver Phases): No limit.
Lynx: No limit...................... Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Marten: No limit.................... Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Mink and Weasel: No limit........... Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Muskrat: No limit................... Nov. 10-June 10.
Otter: No limit..................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Wolf: No limit...................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Wolverine: No limit................. Nov. 10-Jan. 31.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(12) Unit 12. Unit 12 consists of the Tanana River drainage
upstream from the Robertson River, including all drainages into the
east bank of the Robertson River, and the White River drainage in
Alaska, but excluding the Ladue River drainage.
(i) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) You may use bait to hunt black bear between April 15 and June
30; you may use bait to hunt wolves on FWS and BLM lands;
(B) You may not use a steel trap, or a snare using cable smaller
than 3/32 inch diameter to trap coyotes or wolves in Unit 12 during
April and October;
(C) One moose without calf may be taken from June 20-July 31 in the
Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve in Unit 11 or 12 for the
Batzulnetas Culture Camp. Two hunters from either Chistochina or
Mentasta Village may be designated by the Mt. Sanford Tribal Consortium
to receive the Federal subsistence harvest permit. The permit may be
obtained from a Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve office.
(ii) A joint permit may be issued to a pair of a minor and an elder
to hunt sheep during the Sept. 21-Oct. 20 hunt. The following
conditions apply:
(A) The permittees must be a minor aged 8 to 15 years old and an
accompanying adult 60 years of age or older;
(B) Both the elder and the minor must be Federally qualified
subsistence users with a positive customary and traditional use
determination for the area they want to hunt;
(C) The minor must hunt under the direct immediate supervision of
the accompanying adult, who is responsible for ensuring that all legal
requirements are met;
(D) Only one animal may be harvested with this permit. The sheep
harvested will count against the harvest limits of both the minor and
accompanying adult.
[[Page 73457]]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear:.......................
3 bears....................... July 1-June 30.
Brown Bear:.......................
1 bear........................ Aug. 10-June 30.
Caribou:..........................
Unit 12--that portion of the No open season.
Nabesna River drainage within
the Wrangell-St. Elias
National Park and Preserve
and all Federal lands south
of the Winter Trail running
southeast from Pickerel Lake
to the Canadian border--All
hunting of caribou is
prohibited on Federal public
lands.
Unit 12--remainder--1 bull.... Sept. 1-20.
Unit 12--remainder--1 caribou Winter season to be announced.
may be taken by a Federal
registration permit during a
winter season to be
announced. Dates for a winter
season to occur between Oct.
1 and Apr. 30 and sex of
animal to be taken will be
announced by Tetlin National
Wildlife Refuge Manager in
consultation with Wrangell-
St. Elias National Park and
Preserve Superintendent,
Alaska Department of Fish and
Game area biologists, and
Chairs of the Eastern
Interior Regional Advisory
Council and Upper Tanana/
Fortymile Fish and Game
Advisory Committee.
Sheep:
Unit 12--1 ram with full curl Aug. 10-Sept. 20.
or larger horn.
Unit 12--that portion within Sept. 21-Oct. 20.
Wrangell-St. Elias National
Park and Preserve--1 ram with
full curl horn or larger by
Federal registration permit
only by persons 60 years of
age or older.
Moose:
Unit 12--that portion within Aug. 24-28.
the Tetlin National Wildlife Sept. 8-17.
Refuge and those lands within Nov. 20-Dec 10.
the Wrangell-St. Elias
National Preserve north and
east of a line formed by the
Pickerel Lake Winter Trail
from the Canadian border to
Pickerel Lake--1 antlered
bull. The Nov.-Dec. season is
open by Federal registration
permit only.
Unit 12--that portion east of Aug. 24-Sept. 30.
the Nabesna River and Nabesna
Glacier, and south of the
Winter Trail running
southeast from Pickerel Lake
to the Canadian border--1
antlered bull.
Unit 12--remainder--1 antlered Aug. 15-23.
bull with spike/fork antlers.
Unit 12--remainder--1 antlered Aug. 24-28.
bull. Sept. 1-17.
Beaver:
Unit 12--Wrangell-Saint Elias Sept. 20-May 15.
National Park and Preserve--6
beaver per season. Meat from
harvested beaver must be
salvaged for human
consumption.
Coyote:
10 coyotes.................... Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black
and Silver Phases):
10 foxes; however, no more Sept. 1-Mar. 15.
than 2 foxes may be taken
prior to Oct. 1.
Hare (Snowshoe):
No limit...................... July 1-June 30.
Lynx:
2 lynx........................ Nov. 1-Mar. 15.
Wolf:
10 wolves..................... Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Wolverine:
1 wolverine................... Sept. 1-Mar. 31
Grouse (Spruce, Ruffed, and Sharp-
tailed):
15 per day, 30 in possession.. Aug. 10-Mar. 31.
Ptarmigan (Rock, Willow, and White-
tailed):
20 per day, 40 in possession.. Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver:
15 beaver per season. Only Sept. 20-May 15.
firearms may be used during
Sept. 20-Oct. 31 and Apr. 16-
May 15, to take up to 6
beaver. Only traps or snares
may be used Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
The total annual harvest
limit for beaver is 15, of
which no more than 6 may be
taken by firearm under
trapping or hunting
regulations. Meat from beaver
harvested by firearm must be
salvaged for human
consumption.
Coyote:
No limit...................... Oct. 15-Apr. 30.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black
and Silver Phases):
No limit...................... Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Lynx:
No limit; however, no more Nov. 1-Dec. 31.
than 5 lynx may be taken
between Nov. 1 and Nov. 30.
Marten:
No limit...................... Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Mink and Weasel:
No limit...................... Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Muskrat:
No limit...................... Sept. 20-June 10.
Otter:
No limit...................... Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Wolf:
No limit...................... Oct. 1-Apr. 30.
Wolverine:
[[Page 73458]]
No limit...................... Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(13) Unit 13. (i) Unit 13 consists of that area westerly of the
east bank of the Copper River and drained by all tributaries into the
west bank of the Copper River from Miles Glacier and including the
Slana River drainages north of Suslota Creek; the drainages into the
Delta River upstream from Falls Creek and Black Rapids Glacier; the
drainages into the Nenana River upstream from the southeast corner of
Denali National Park at Windy; the drainage into the Susitna River
upstream from its junction with the Chulitna River; the drainage into
the east bank of the Chulitna River upstream to its confluence with
Tokositna River; the drainages of the Chulitna River (south of Denali
National Park) upstream from its confluence with the Tokositna River;
the drainages into the north bank of the Tokositna River upstream to
the base of the Tokositna Glacier; the drainages into the Tokositna
Glacier; the drainages into the east bank of the Susitna River between
its confluences with the Talkeetna and Chulitna Rivers; the drainages
into the north and east bank of the Talkeetna River including the
Talkeetna River to its confluence with Clear Creek, the eastside
drainages of a line going up the south bank of Clear Creek to the first
unnamed creek on the south, then up that creek to lake 4408, along the
northeast shore of lake 4408, then southeast in a straight line to the
northern most fork of the Chickaloon River; the drainages into the east
bank of the Chickaloon River below the line from lake 4408; the
drainages of the Matanuska River above its confluence with the
Chickaloon River:
(A) Unit 13A consists of that portion of Unit 13 bounded by a line
beginning at the Chickaloon River bridge at Mile 77.7 on the Glenn
Highway, then along the Glenn Highway to its junction with the
Richardson Highway, then south along the Richardson Highway to the foot
of Simpson Hill at Mile 111.5, then east to the east bank of the Copper
River, then northerly along the east bank of the Copper River to its
junction with the Gulkana River, then northerly along the west bank of
the Gulkana River to its junction with the West Fork of the Gulkana
River, then westerly along the west bank of the West Fork of the
Gulkana River to its source, an unnamed lake, then across the divide
into the Tyone River drainage, down an unnamed stream into the Tyone
River, then down the Tyone River to the Susitna River, then down the
southern bank of the Susitna River to the mouth of Kosina Creek, then
up Kosina Creek to its headwaters, then across the divide and down
Aspen Creek to the Talkeetna River, then southerly along the boundary
of Unit 13 to the Chickaloon River bridge, the point of beginning;
(B) Unit 13B consists of that portion of Unit 13 bounded by a line
beginning at the confluence of the Copper River and the Gulkana River,
then up the east bank of the Copper River to the Gakona River, then up
the Gakona River and Gakona Glacier to the boundary of Unit 13, then
westerly along the boundary of Unit 13 to the Susitna Glacier, then
southerly along the west bank of the Susitna Glacier and the Susitna
River to the Tyone River, then up the Tyone River and across the divide
to the headwaters of the West Fork of the Gulkana River, then down the
West Fork of the Gulkana River to the confluence of the Gulkana River
and the Copper River, the point of beginning;
(C) Unit 13C consists of that portion of Unit 13 east of the Gakona
River and Gakona Glacier;
(D) Unit 13D consists of that portion of Unit 13 south of Unit
13(A);
(E) Unit 13E consists of the remainder of Unit 13.
(ii) Within the following areas, the taking of wildlife for
subsistence uses is prohibited or restricted on public lands:
(A) You may not take wildlife for subsistence uses on lands within
Mount McKinley National Park as it existed prior to December 2, 1980.
Subsistence uses as authorized by this paragraph (m)(13) are permitted
in Denali National Preserve and lands added to Denali National Park on
December 2, 1980;
(B) You may not use motorized vehicles or pack animals for hunting
from Aug. 5-25 in the Delta Controlled Use Area, the boundary of which
is defined as: A line beginning at the confluence of Miller Creek and
the Delta River, then west to vertical angle benchmark Miller, then
west to include all drainages of Augustana Creek and Black Rapids
Glacier, then north and east to include all drainages of McGinnis Creek
to its confluence with the Delta River, then east in a straight line
across the Delta River to Mile 236.7 Richardson Highway, then north
along the Richardson Highway to its junction with the Alaska Highway,
then east along the Alaska Highway to the west bank of the Johnson
River, then south along the west bank of the Johnson River and Johnson
Glacier to the head of the Cantwell Glacier, then west along the north
bank of the Cantwell Glacier and Miller Creek to the Delta River;
(C) Except for access and transportation of harvested wildlife on
Sourdough and Haggard Creeks, Middle Fork trails, or other trails
designated by the Board, you may not use motorized vehicles for
subsistence hunting in the Sourdough Controlled Use Area. The Sourdough
Controlled Use Area consists of that portion of Unit 13B bounded by a
line beginning at the confluence of Sourdough Creek and the Gulkana
River, then northerly along Sourdough Creek to the Richardson Highway
at approximately Mile 148, then northerly along the Richardson Highway
to the Middle Fork Trail at approximately Mile 170, then westerly along
the trail to the Gulkana River, then southerly along the east bank of
the Gulkana River to its confluence with Sourdough Creek, the point of
beginning;
(D) You may not use any motorized vehicle or pack animal for
hunting, including the transportation of hunters, their hunting gear,
and/or parts of game from July 26-September 30 in the Tonsina
Controlled Use Area. The Tonsina Controlled Use Area consists of that
portion of Unit 13D bounded on the west by the Richardson Highway from
the Tiekel River to the Tonsina River at Tonsina, on the north along
the south bank of the Tonsina River to where the Edgerton Highway
crosses the Tonsina River, then along the Edgerton Highway to Chitina,
on the east by the Copper River from Chitina to the Tiekel River, and
on the south by the north bank of the Tiekel River.
(iii) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) You may use bait to hunt black bear between April 15 and June
15;
(B) Upon written request by the Camp Director to the Glennallen
Field Office, 2 caribou, sex to be determined by the Glennallen Field
Office Manager of the BLM, may be taken from Aug. 10-Sept. 30 or Oct.
21-Mar. 31 by Federal registration permit for the Hudson Lake
Residential Treatment Camp. Additionally, 1 bull moose may be taken
Aug. 1-Sept. 20. The animals may be taken by any Federally qualified
hunter designated by the Camp Director. The hunter must have in his/her
possession the permit and a designated hunter
[[Page 73459]]
permit during all periods that are being hunted;
(C) Upon written request from the Ahtna Heritage Foundation to the
Glennallen Field Office, either 1 bull moose or 2 caribou, sex to be
determined by the Glennallen Field Office Manager of the Bureau of Land
Management, may be taken from Aug 1-Sept. 20 for 1 moose or Aug. 10-
Sept. 20 for 2 caribou by Federal registration permit for the Ahtna
Heritage Foundation's culture camp. The permit will expire on September
20 or when the camp closes, whichever comes first. No combination of
caribou and moose is allowed. The animals may be taken by any Federally
qualified hunter designated by the Camp Director. The hunter must have
in his/her possession the permit and a designated hunter permit during
all periods that are being hunted.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear:
3 bears....................... July 1-June 30.
Brown Bear:
1 bear. Bears taken within Aug. 10-May 31.
Denali National Park must be
sealed within 5 days of
harvest. That portion within
Denali National Park will be
closed by announcement of the
Superintendent after 4 bears
have been harvested.
Caribou:
Unit 13A and 13B--2 caribou by Aug. 10-Sept. 30.
Federal registration permit Oct. 21-Mar. 31.
only. The sex of animals that
may be taken will be
announced by the Glennallen
Field Office Manager of the
Bureau of Land Management in
consultation with the Alaska
Department of Fish and Game
area biologist and Chairs of
the Eastern Interior Regional
Advisory Council and the
Southcentral Regional
Advisory Council.
Unit 13--remainder--2 bulls by Aug. 10-Sept. 30.
Federal registration permit Oct. 21-Mar. 31.
only..
You may not hunt within the Trans-
Alaska Oil Pipeline right-of-way.
The right-of-way is the area
occupied by the pipeline (buried
or above ground) and the cleared
area 25 feet on either side of
the pipeline.
Sheep:
Unit 13, excluding Unit 13D Aug. 10-Sept. 20.
and the Tok Management Area
and Delta Controlled Use
Area--1 ram with \7/8\ curl
or larger horn.
Moose:
Unit 13E--1 antlered bull Aug. 1-Sept. 20.
moose by Federal registration
permit only; only 1 permit
will be issued per household.
Unit 13--remainder--1 antlered Aug. 1-Sept. 20.
bull moose by Federal
registration permit only.
Beaver:
1 beaver per day, 1 in June 15-Sept. 10.
possession.
Coyote:
10 coyotes.................... Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black
and Silver Phases):
10 foxes; however, no more Sept. 1-Mar. 15.
than 2 foxes may be taken
prior to Oct. 1.
Hare (Snowshoe):
No limit...................... July 1-June 30.
Lynx:
2 lynx........................ Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Wolf:
10 wolves..................... Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Wolverine:
1 wolverine................... Sept. 1-Jan. 31.
Grouse (Spruce, Ruffled, and Sharp-
tailed):
15 per day, 30 in possession.. Aug. 10-Mar. 31.
Ptarmigan (Rock, Willow, and White-
tailed):
20 per day, 40 in possession.. Aug. 10-Mar. 31.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver:
No limit...................... Sept. 25-May 31.
Coyote:
No limit...................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black
and Silver Phases):
No limit...................... Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Lynx:
No limit...................... Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Marten:
Unit 13--No limit............. Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Mink and Weasel:
No limit...................... Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Muskrat:
No limit...................... Sept. 25-June 10.
Otter:
No limit...................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Wolf:
No limit...................... Oct. 15-Apr. 30.
Wolverine:
No limit...................... Nov. 10-Jan. 31.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 73460]]
(14) Unit 14. (i) Unit 14 consists of drainages into the north side
of Turnagain Arm west of and excluding the Portage Creek drainage,
drainages into Knik Arm excluding drainages of the Chickaloon and
Matanuska Rivers in Unit 13, drainages into the north side of Cook
Inlet east of the Susitna River, drainages into the east bank of the
Susitna River downstream from the Talkeetna River, and drainages into
the south and west bank of the Talkeetna River to its confluence with
Clear Creek, the west side drainages of a line going up the south bank
of Clear Creek to the first unnamed creek on the south, then up that
creek to lake 4408, along the northeast shore of lake 4408, then
southeast in a straight line to the northernmost fork of the Chickaloon
River:
(A) Unit 14A consists of drainages in Unit 14 bounded on the west
by the east bank of the Susitna River, on the north by the north bank
of Willow Creek and Peters Creek to its headwaters, then east along the
hydrologic divide separating the Susitna River and Knik Arm drainages
to the outlet creek at lake 4408, on the east by the eastern boundary
of Unit 14, and on the south by Cook Inlet, Knik Arm, the south bank of
the Knik River from its mouth to its junction with Knik Glacier, across
the face of Knik Glacier and along the north side of Knik Glacier to
the Unit 6 boundary;
(B) Unit 14B consists of that portion of Unit 14 north of Unit 14A;
(C) Unit 14C consists of that portion of Unit 14 south of Unit 14A.
(ii) In the following areas, the taking of wildlife for subsistence
uses is prohibited or restricted on public lands:
(A) You may not take wildlife for subsistence uses in the Fort
Richardson and Elmendorf Air Force Base Management Areas, consisting of
the Fort Richardson and Elmendorf Military Reservation;
(B) You may not take wildlife for subsistence uses in the Anchorage
Management Area, consisting of all drainages south of Elmendorf and
Fort Richardson military reservations and north of and including
Rainbow Creek.
(iii) Unit-specific regulations:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear:
Unit 14C--1 bear.............. July 1-June 30.
Beaver:
Unit 14C--1 beaver per day, 1 May 15-Oct. 31.
in possession.
Coyote:
Unit 14C--2 coyotes........... Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black
and Silver Phases):
Unit 14C--2 foxes............. Nov. 1-Feb. 15.
Hare (Snowshoe):
Unit 14C--5 hares per day..... Sept. 8-Apr. 30.
Lynx:
Unit 14C--2 lynx.............. Dec. 1-Jan. 31.
Wolf:
Unit 14C--5 wolves............ Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Wolverine:
Unit 14C--1 wolverine......... Sept. 1-Mar. 31.
Grouse (Spruce and Ruffed):
Unit 14C--5 per day, 10 in Sept. 8-Mar. 31.
possession.
Ptarmigan (Rock, Willow, and White-
tailed):
Unit 14C--10 per day, 20 in Sept. 8-Mar. 31.
possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver:
Unit 14C--that portion within Dec. 1-Apr. 15.
the drainages of Glacier
Creek, Kern Creek, Peterson
Creek, the Twentymile River
and the drainages of Knik
River outside Chugach State
Park--20 beaver per season.
Coyote:
Unit 14C--No limit............ Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black
and Silver Phases):
Unit 14C--1 fox............... Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Lynx:
Unit 14C--No limit............ Dec. 15-Jan. 31.
Marten:
Unit 14C--No limit............ Nov. 10-Jan. 31.
Mink and Weasel:
Unit 14C--No limit............ Nov. 10-Jan. 31.
Muskrat:
Unit 14C--No limit............ Nov. 10-May 15.
Otter:
Unit 14C--No limit............ Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Wolf:
Unit 14C--No limit............ Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Wolverine:
Unit 14C--No limit............ Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 73461]]
(15) Unit 15. (i) Unit 15 consists of that portion of the Kenai
Peninsula and adjacent islands draining into the Gulf of Alaska, Cook
Inlet, and Turnagain Arm from Gore Point to the point where longitude
line 150[deg] 00' W. crosses the coastline of Chickaloon Bay in
Turnagain Arm, including that area lying west of longitude line
150[deg] 00' W. to the mouth of the Russian River, then southerly along
the Chugach National Forest boundary to the upper end of Upper Russian
Lake; and including the drainages into Upper Russian Lake west of the
Chugach National Forest boundary:
(A) Unit 15A consists of that portion of Unit 15 north of the north
bank of the Kenai River and the north shore of Skilak Lake;
(B) Unit 15B consists of that portion of Unit 15 south of the north
bank of the Kenai River and the north shore of Skilak Lake, and north
of the north bank of the Kasilof River, the north shore of Tustumena
Lake, Glacier Creek, and Tustumena Glacier;
(C) Unit 15C consists of the remainder of Unit 15.
(ii) You may not take wildlife, except for grouse, ptarmigan, and
hares that may be taken only from October 1--March 1 by bow and arrow
only, in the Skilak Loop Management Area, which consists of that
portion of Unit 15A bounded by a line beginning at the easternmost
junction of the Sterling Highway and the Skilak Loop (milepost 76.3),
then due south to the south bank of the Kenai River, then southerly
along the south bank of the Kenai River to its confluence with Skilak
Lake, then westerly along the north shore of Skilak Lake to Lower
Skilak Lake Campground, then northerly along the Lower Skilak Lake
Campground Road and the Skilak Loop Road to its westernmost junction
with the Sterling Highway, then easterly along the Sterling Highway to
the point of beginning.
(iii) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) You may use bait to hunt black bear between April 15 and June
15;
(B) You may not trap furbearers for subsistence in the Skilak Loop
Wildlife Management Area;
(C) You may not trap marten in that portion of Unit 15B east of the
Kenai River, Skilak Lake, Skilak River, and Skilak Glacier;
(D) You may not take red fox in Unit 15 by any means other than a
steel trap or snare.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear:
Unit 15A and 15B--2 bears by July 1-June 30.
Federal registration permit.
Unit 15C--3 bears............. July 1-June 30.
Brown Bear:
Unit 15C--1 bear every four Oct. 1-Nov. 30 To be announced. -and-
regulatory years by Federal Apr. 1-June 15 To be announced.
registration permit. The
season may be opened or
closed by announcement from
the Kenai National Wildlife
Refuge Manager after
consultation with ADF&G and
the Chair of the Southcentral
Alaska Subsistence Regional
Advisory Council.
Moose:
Unit 15A--Skilak Loop Wildlife No open season.
Management Area.
Unit 15A--remainder, 15B, and Aug. 10-Sept. 20.
15C--1 antlered bull with
spike-fork or 50-inch antlers
or with 3 or more brow tines
on either antler, by Federal
registration permit only.
Units 15B and 15C--1 antlered Oct. 20-Nov. 10.
bull with spike-fork or 50-
inch antlers or with 3 or
more brow tines on either
antler, by Federal
registration permit only. The
Kenai NWR Refuge Manager is
authorized to close the
October/November season based
on conservation concerns, in
consultation with ADF&G and
the Chair of the Southcentral
Alaska Subsistence Regional
Advisory Council.
Coyote: No limit.................. Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Hare (Snowshoe): No limit......... July 1-June 30.
Lynx: 2 lynx...................... Nov. 10-Jan. 31.
Wolf:
Unit 15--that portion within Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
the Kenai National Wildlife
Refuge--2 wolves.
Unit 15--remainder--5 wolves.. Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: 1 wolverine............ Sept. 1-Mar. 31.
Grouse (Spruce):..................
15 per day, 30 in possession.. Aug. 10-Mar. 31.
Grouse (Ruffed)................... No open season.
Ptarmigan (Rock, Willow, and White-
tailed):
Unit 15A and 15B--20 per day, Aug. 10-Mar. 31.
40 in possession.
Unit 15C--20 per day, 40 in Aug. 10-Dec. 31.
possession.
Unit 15C--5 per day, 10 in Jan. 1-Mar. 31.
possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver: 20 Beaver per season...... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Coyote: No limit.................. Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
and Silver Phases): 1 Fox.
Marten:
Unit 15B--that portion east of No open season.
the Kenai River, Skilak Lake,
Skilak River, and Skilak
Glacier.
Remainder of Unit 15--No limit Nov. 10-Jan. 31.
Mink and Weasel: No limit......... Nov. 10-Jan. 31.
Muskrat: No limit................. Nov. 10-May 15.
Otter: Unit 15--No limit.......... Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Wolf: No limit.................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Wolverine: Unit 15B and C--No Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
limit.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 73462]]
(16) Unit 16. (i) Unit 16 consists of the drainages into Cook Inlet
between Redoubt Creek and the Susitna River, including Redoubt Creek
drainage, Kalgin Island, and the drainages on the west side of the
Susitna River (including the Susitna River) upstream to its confluence
with the Chulitna River; the drainages into the west side of the
Chulitna River (including the Chulitna River) upstream to the Tokositna
River, and drainages into the south side of the Tokositna River
upstream to the base of the Tokositna Glacier, including the drainage
of the Kahiltna Glacier:
(A) Unit 16A consists of that portion of Unit 16 east of the east
bank of the Yentna River from its mouth upstream to the Kahiltna River,
east of the east bank of the Kahiltna River, and east of the Kahiltna
Glacier;
(B) Unit 16B consists of the remainder of Unit 16.
(ii) You may not take wildlife for subsistence uses in the Mount
McKinley National Park, as it existed prior to December 2, 1980.
Subsistence uses as authorized by this paragraph (m)(16) are permitted
in Denali National Preserve and lands added to Denali National Park on
December 2, 1980.
(iii) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) You may use bait to hunt black bear between April 15 and June
15.
(B) [Reserved]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear: 3 bears............... July 1-June 30.
Caribou: 1 caribou................ Aug. 10-Oct. 31.
Moose:
Unit 16B--Redoubt Bay Sept. 1-15.
Drainages south and west of,
and including the Kustatan
River drainage--1 bull.
Unit 16B--remainder 1 bull.... Sept. 1-30.
Dec. 1-Feb. 28.
Coyote: 2 coyotes................. Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black Sept. 1-Feb. 15.
and Silver Phases): 2 foxes.
Hare (Snowshoe): No limit......... July 1-June 30.
Lynx: 2 lynx...................... Dec. 1-Jan. 31.
Wolf: 5 wolves.................... Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: 1 wolverine............ Sept. 1-Mar. 31.
Grouse (Spruce and Ruffed): 15 per Aug. 10-Mar. 31.
day, 30 in possession.
Ptarmigan (Rock, Willow, and White- Aug. 10-Mar. 31.
tailed): 20 per day, 40 in
possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver: No limit.................. Oct. 10-May 15.
Coyote: No limit.................. Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
and Silver Phases): No limit.
Lynx: No limit.................... Dec. 15-Jan. 31.
Marten: No limit.................. Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Mink and Weasel: No limit......... Nov. 10-Jan. 31.
Muskrat: No limit................. Nov. 10-June 10.
Otter: No limit................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Wolf: No limit.................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Wolverine: No limit............... Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(17) Unit 17. (i) Unit 17 consists of drainages into Bristol Bay
and the Bering Sea between Etolin Point and Cape Newenham, and all
islands between these points including Hagemeister Island and the
Walrus Islands:
(A) Unit 17A consists of the drainages between Cape Newenham and
Cape Constantine, and Hagemeister Island and the Walrus Islands;
(B) Unit 17B consists of the Nushagak River drainage upstream from,
and including the Mulchatna River drainage, and the Wood River drainage
upstream from the outlet of Lake Beverley;
(C) Unit 17C consists of the remainder of Unit 17.
(ii) In the following areas, the taking of wildlife for subsistence
uses is prohibited or restricted on public lands:
(A) Except for aircraft and boats and in legal hunting camps, you
may not use any motorized vehicle for hunting ungulates, bears, wolves,
and wolverine, including transportation of hunters and parts of
ungulates, bear, wolves, or wolverine in the Upper Mulchatna Controlled
Use Area consisting of Unit 17B, from Aug. 1-Nov. 1.
(B) [Reserved]
(iii) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) You may use bait to hunt black bear between April 15 and June
15;
(B) You may hunt brown bear by State registration permit in lieu of
a resident tag if you have obtained a State registration permit prior
to hunting;
(C) For Federal registration permit caribou hunts for Unit 17A and
17C, that portion consisting of the Nushagak Peninsula south of the
Igushik River, Tuklung River and Tuklung Hills, west to Tvativak Bay, a
Federally qualified subsistence user may designate another Federally
qualified subsistence user to harvest caribou on his or her behalf. The
designated hunter must obtain a designated hunter permit and must
return a completed harvest report. The designated hunter may hunt for
any number of recipients but may have no more than two harvest limits
in his/her possession at any one time;
(D) If you have a trapping license, you may use a firearm to take
beaver in Unit 17 from April 15-May 31. You may not take beaver with a
firearm under a trapping license on National Park Service lands.
[[Page 73463]]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear: 2 bears............... Aug. 1-May 31.
Brown Bear: Unit 17--1 bear by Sept. 1-May 31.
State registration permit only.
Caribou:
Unit 17A--all drainages west Aug. 1-Mar. 31.
of Right Hand Point--3
caribou; however, no more
than 1 caribou may be taken
from Aug. 1-Nov. 30. The
season may be closed and
harvest limit reduced for the
drainages between the Togiak
River and Right Hand Point by
announcement of the Togiak
National Wildlife Refuge
Manager.
Unit 17A and 17C--that portion Aug. 1-Sept. 30.
of 17A and 17C consisting of Dec. 1-Mar. 31.
the Nushagak Peninsula south
of the Igushik River, Tuklung
River and Tuklung Hills, west
to Tvativak Bay--up to 2
caribou by Federal
registration permit. Public
lands are closed to the
taking of caribou except by
the residents of Togiak, Twin
Hills, Manokotak, Aleknagik,
Dillingham, Clark's Point,
and Ekuk hunting under these
regulations. The harvest
objective, harvest limit, and
the number of permits
available will be announced
by the Togiak National
Wildlife Refuge Manager after
consultation with the Alaska
Department of Fish and Game
and the Nushagak Peninsula
Caribou Planning Committee.
Successful hunters must
report their harvest to the
Togiak National Wildlife
Refuge within 24 hours after
returning from the field. The
season may be closed by
announcement of the Togiak
National Wildlife Refuge
Manager.
Unit 17A--remainder and 17C-- Season to occur sometime within Aug.
remainder--selected 1-Mar. 31 timeframe; season,
drainages; a harvest limit of harvest limit, and hunt area to be
up to 5 caribou will be announced by the Togiak National
determined at the time the Wildlife Refuge Manager.
season is announced.
Unit 17B and 17C--that portion Aug. 1-Apr. 15.
of 17C east of the Wood River
and Wood River Lakes--3
caribou; however, no more
than 1 caribou may be taken
from Aug. 1-Nov. 30.
Sheep: 1 ram with full curl or Aug. 10-Sept. 20.
larger horn.
Moose:
Unit 17A--1 bull by State Aug. 25-Sept. 20.
registration permit.
Unit 17A--that portion that Winter season to be announced.
includes the area east of the
west shore of Nenevok Lake,
east of the west bank of the
Kemuk River, and east of the
west bank of the Togiak River
south from the confluence
Togiak and Kemuk Rivers--1
antlered bull by State
registration permit. Up to a
14-day season during the
period Dec. 1-Jan. 31 may be
opened or closed by the
Togiak National Wildlife
Refuge Manager after
consultation with ADF&G and
local users.
Unit 17B--that portion that Aug. 20-Sept. 15.
includes all the Mulchatna
River drainage upstream from
and including the Chilchitna
River drainage--1 bull by
State registration permit.
During the period Sept. 1-15,
a spike/fork bull or a bull
with 50-inch antlers or with
3 or more brow tines on one
side may be taken with a
State harvest ticket.
Unit 17C--that portion that Aug. 20-Sept. 15.
includes the Iowithla
drainage and Sunshine Valley
and all lands west of Wood
River and south of Aleknagik
Lake--1 bull by State
registration permit. During
the period Sept. 1-15, a
spike/fork bull or a bull
with 50-inch antlers or with
3 or more brow tines on one
side may be taken with a
State harvest ticket.
Unit 17B--remainder and 17C-- Aug. 20-Sept. 15.
remainder--1 bull by State Dec. 1-31.
registration permit. During
the period Sept. 1-15, a
spike/fork bull or a bull
with 50-inch antlers or with
3 or more brow tines on one
side may be taken with a
State harvest ticket.
Coyote: 2 coyotes................. Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Fox, Arctic (Blue and White Dec. 1-Mar. 15.
Phase): No limit.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black Sept. 1-Feb. 15.
and Silver Phases): 2 foxes.
Hare (Snowshoe and Tundra): No July 1-June 30.
limit.
Lynx: 2 lynx...................... Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Wolf: 10 wolves................... Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: 1 wolverine............ Sept. 1-Mar. 31.
Grouse (Spruce and Ruffed): 15 per Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
day, 30 in possession.
Ptarmigan (Rock and Willow): 20 Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
per day, 40 in possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver:
Unit 17--No limit............. Oct. 10-Mar. 31.
Unit 17--2 beaver per day. Apr. 15-May 31.
Only firearms may be used.
Coyote: No limit.................. Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Fox, Arctic (Blue and White Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Phase): No limit.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
and Silver Phases): No limit.
Lynx: No limit.................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Marten: No limit.................. Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Mink and Weasel: No limit......... Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Muskrat: 2 muskrats............... Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
Otter: No limit................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Wolf: No limit.................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Wolverine: No limit............... Nov. 10-Feb. 28.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 73464]]
(18) Unit 18. (i) Unit 18 consists of that area draining into the
Yukon and Kuskokwim Rivers downstream from a straight line drawn
between Lower Kalskag and Paimiut and the drainages flowing into the
Bering Sea from Cape Newenham on the south to and including the
Pastolik River drainage on the north; Nunivak, St. Matthew, and
adjacent islands between Cape Newenham and the Pastolik River.
(ii) In the Kalskag Controlled Use Area, which consists of that
portion of Unit 18 bounded by a line from Lower Kalskag on the
Kuskokwim River, northwesterly to Russian Mission on the Yukon River,
then east along the north bank of the Yukon River to the old site of
Paimiut, then back to Lower Kalskag, you are not allowed to use
aircraft for hunting any ungulate, bear, wolf, or wolverine, including
the transportation of any hunter and ungulate, bear, wolf, or wolverine
part; however, this does not apply to transportation of a hunter or
ungulate, bear, wolf, or wolverine part by aircraft between publicly
owned airports in the Controlled Use Area or between a publicly owned
airport within the Area and points outside the Area.
(iii) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) If you have a trapping license, you may use a firearm to take
beaver in Unit 18 from Apr. 1-Jun. 10;
(B) You may hunt brown bear by State registration permit in lieu of
a resident tag if you have obtained a State registration permit prior
to hunting;
(C) You may take caribou from a boat moving under power in Unit 18.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear: 3 bears............... July 1-June 30.
Brown Bear: 1 bear by State Sept. 1-May 31.
registration permit only.
Caribou: 3 caribou; however, no Aug. 1-Mar. 15.
more than 1 caribou may be taken
from Aug. 1-Nov. 30.
Moose:
Unit 18--that portion east of No open season.
a line running from the mouth
of the Ishkowik River to the
closest point of Dall Lake,
then to the easternmost point
of Takslesluk Lake, then
along the Kuskokwim River
drainage boundary to the Unit
18 border, and then north of
and including the Eek River
drainage. Federal public
lands are closed to the
taking of moose by all users.
Unit 18--south of and No open season.
including the Kanektok River
drainages. Federal public
lands are closed to the
taking of moose by all users.
Unit 18--That portion north Aug 10-Sept. 30.
and west of a line from Cape
Romanzof to Kusilvak Mountain
to Mountain Village and
excluding all Yukon River
drainages upriver from
Mountain Village--1 antlered
bull.
Unit 18--That portion north Dec. 20-Jan. 20.
and west of a line from Cape
Romanzof to Kusilvak Mountain
to Mountain Village and
excluding all Yukon River
drainages upriver from
Mountain Village--1 moose.
The Yukon Delta NWR Manager
may restrict the harvest to
only antlered bulls after
consultation with the ADF&G
and the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta
Subsistence Regional Advisory
Council chair.
Unit 18--remainder--1 antlered Aug. 10-Sept. 30.
bull. Dec. 20-Jan. 10.
Beaver: No limit.................. July 1-June 30.
Coyote: 2 coyotes................. Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Fox, Arctic (Blue and White Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Phase): 2 foxes.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black Sept. 1-Mar. 15.
and Silver Phases): 10 foxes;
however, no more than 2 foxes may
be taken prior to Oct. 1.
Hare (Snowshoe and Tundra): No July 1-June 30.
limit.
Lynx: 2 lynx...................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Wolf: 5 wolves.................... Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: 1 wolverine............ Sept. 1-Mar. 31.
Grouse (Spruce and Ruffed): 15 per Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
day, 30 in possession.
Ptarmigan (Rock and Willow): 20 Aug. 10-May 30.
per day, 40 in possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver: No limit.................. July 1-June 30.
Coyote: No limit.................. Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Fox, Arctic (Blue and White Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Phase): No limit.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
and Silver Phases): No limit.
Lynx: No limit.................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Marten: No limit.................. Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Mink and Weasel: No limit......... Nov. 10-Jan. 31.
Muskrat: No limit................. Nov. 10-June 10.
Otter: No limit................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Wolf: No limit.................... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
Wolverine: No limit............... Nov. 10-Mar. 31.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(19) Unit 19. (i) Unit 19 consists of the Kuskokwim River drainage
upstream from a straight line drawn between Lower Kalskag and Piamiut:
(A) Unit 19A consists of the Kuskokwim River drainage downstream
from and including the Moose Creek drainage on the north bank and
downstream from and including the Stony River drainage on the south
bank, excluding Unit 19B;
(B) Unit 19B consists of the Aniak River drainage upstream from and
including the Salmon River drainage, the Holitna River drainage
upstream from and including the Bakbuk Creek drainage, that area south
of a line from the mouth of Bakbuk Creek to the radar dome at
Sparrevohn Air Force Base, including the Hoholitna River drainage
upstream from that line, and the Stony River drainage upstream from and
including the Can Creek drainage;
[[Page 73465]]
(C) Unit 19C consists of that portion of Unit 19 south and east of
a line from Benchmark M1.26 (approximately 1.26 miles south of
the northwest corner of the original Mt. McKinley National Park
boundary) to the peak of Lone Mountain, then due west to Big River,
including the Big River drainage upstream from that line, and including
the Swift River drainage upstream from and including the North Fork
drainage;
(D) Unit 19D consists of the remainder of Unit 19.
(ii) In the following areas, the taking of wildlife for subsistence
uses is prohibited or restricted on public land:
(A) You may not take wildlife for subsistence uses on lands within
Mount McKinley National Park as it existed prior to December 2, 1980.
Subsistence uses as authorized by this paragraph (m)(19) are permitted
in Denali National Preserve and lands added to Denali National Park on
December 2, 1980;
(B) In the Upper Kuskokwim Controlled Use Area, which consists of
that portion of Unit 19D upstream from the mouth of the Selatna River,
but excluding the Selatna and Black River drainages, to a line
extending from Dyckman Mountain on the northern Unit 19D boundary
southeast to the 1,610 foot crest of Munsatli Ridge, then south along
Munsatli Ridge to the 2,981 foot peak of Telida Mountain, then
northeast to the intersection of the western boundary of Denali
National Preserve with the Minchumina-Telida winter trail, then south
along the western boundary of Denali National Preserve to the southern
boundary of Unit 19D, you may not use aircraft for hunting moose,
including transportation of any moose hunter or moose part; however,
this does not apply to transportation of a moose hunter or moose part
by aircraft between publicly owned airports in the Controlled Use Area,
or between a publicly owned airport within the area and points outside
the area.
(iii) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) You may use bait to hunt black bear between April 15 and June
30;
(B) You may hunt brown bear by State registration permit in lieu of
a resident tag in those portions of 19A and 19B downstream of and
including the Aniak River drainage if you have obtained a State
registration permit prior to hunting.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear:
3 bears....................... July 1-June 30.
Brown Bear:
Unit 19A and 19B--those Aug. 10-June 30.
portions which are downstream
of and including the Aniak
River drainage--1 bear by
State registration permit.
Unit 19A--remainder, 19B-- Aug. 10-June 30.
remainder, and Unit 19D--1
bear.
Caribou:
Unit 19A--north of Kuskokwim Aug. 10-Sept. 30.
River--1 caribou..
Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Unit 19A--south of the Aug. 1-Apr. 15.
Kuskokwim River and Unit 19B
(excluding rural Alaska
residents of Lime Village)--3
caribou; however, no more
than 1 caribou may be taken
from Aug. 1-Nov 30.
Unit 19C-1 caribou............ Aug. 10-Oct. 10.
Unit 19D--south and east of Aug. 10-Sept. 30.
the Kuskokwim River and North Nov. 1-Jan. 31.
Fork of the Kuskokwim River--
1 caribou.
Unit 19D--remainder--1 caribou Aug. 10-Sept. 30.
Unit 19--Residents domiciled July 1-June 30.
in Lime Village only--no
individual harvest limit but
a village harvest quota of
200 caribou; cows and calves
may not be taken from Apr. 1-
Aug. 9. Reporting will be by
a community reporting system.
Sheep:
1 ram with 7/8 curl horn or Aug. 10-Sept. 20.
larger.
Moose:
Unit 19--Residents of Lime July 1-June 30.
Village only--no individual
harvest limit, but a village
harvest quota of 28 bulls
(including those taken under
the State Tier II system).
Reporting will be by a
community reporting system.
Unit 19A--North of the No open season.
Kuskokwim River, upstream
from but excluding the George
River drainage, and south of
the Kuskokwim River upstream
from and including the Downey
Creek drainage, not including
the Lime Village Management
Area; Federal public lands
are closed to the taking of
moose.
Unit 19A remainder--1 antlered Sept. 1-20.
bull by Federal drawing
permit or a State Tier II
permit. Federal public lands
are closed to the taking of
moose except by residents of
Tuluksak, Lower Kalskag,
Upper Kalskag, Aniak,
Chuathbaluk, and Crooked
Creek hunting under these
regulations. The Refuge
Manager of the Yukon Delta
NWR, in cooperation with the
BLM Field Office Manager,
will annually establish the
harvest quota and number of
permits to be issued in
coordination with the State
Tier II hunt. If the
allowable harvest level is
reached before the regular
season closing date, the
Refuge Manager, in
consultation with the BLM
Field Office Manager, will
announce an early closure of
Federal public lands to all
moose hunting.
Unit 19B-1 bull with spike- Sept. 1-20.
fork or 50-inch antlers or
antlers with 4 or more brow
tines on one side.
Unit 19C-1 antlered bull...... Sept. 1-20.
Uit 19C-1 bull by State Jan. 15-Feb. 15.
registration permit.
Unit 19D--that portion of the Sept. 1-30.
Upper Kuskokwim Controlled
Use Area within the North
Fork drainage upstream from
the confluence of the South
Fork to the mouth of the
Swift Fork--1 antlered bull.
Unit 19D--remainder of the Sept. 1-30.
Upper Kuskokwim Controlled Dec. 1-Feb. 28.
Use Area--1 bull.
Unit 19D--remainder--1 Sept. 1-30.
antlered bull.
Dec. 1-15.
Coyote:
10 coyotes.................... Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black
and Silver Phases):
10 foxes; however, no more Sept. 1-Mar. 15.
than 2 foxes may be taken
prior to Oct. 1.
Hare (Snowshoe):
No limit...................... July 1-June 30.
[[Page 73466]]
Lynx:
2 lynx........................ Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Wolf:
Unit 19D--10 wolves per day... Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Unit 19--remainder--5 wolves.. Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Wolverine:
1 wolverine................... Sept. 1-Mar. 31.
Grouse (Spruce, Ruffed, and Sharp-
tailed):
15 per day, 30 in possession.. Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Ptarmigan (Rock, Willow, and White-
tailed):
20 per day, 40 in possession.. Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver:
No limit...................... Nov. 1-Jun. 10.
Coyote:
No limit...................... Nov. 1-Mar. 31.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black
and Silver Phases):
No limit...................... Nov. 1-Mar. 31.
Lynx:
No limit...................... Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Marten:
No limit...................... Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Mink and Weasel:
No limit...................... Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Muskrat:
No limit...................... Nov. 1-June 10.
Otter:
No limit...................... Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Wolf:
No limit...................... Nov. 1-Apr. 30.
Wolverine:
No limit...................... Nov. 1-Mar. 31.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(20) Unit 20. (i) Unit 20 consists of the Yukon River drainage
upstream from and including the Tozitna River drainage to and including
the Hamlin Creek drainage, drainages into the south bank of the Yukon
River upstream from and including the Charley River drainage, the Ladue
River and Fortymile River drainages, and the Tanana River drainage
north of Unit 13 and downstream from the east bank of the Robertson
River:
(A) Unit 20A consists of that portion of Unit 20 bounded on the
south by the Unit 13 boundary, bounded on the east by the west bank of
the Delta River, bounded on the north by the north bank of the Tanana
River from its confluence with the Delta River downstream to its
confluence with the Nenana River, and bounded on the west by the east
bank of the Nenana River;
(B) Unit 20B consists of drainages into the north bank of the
Tanana River from and including Hot Springs Slough upstream to and
including the Banner Creek drainage;
(C) Unit 20C consists of that portion of Unit 20 bounded on the
east by the east bank of the Nenana River and on the north by the north
bank of the Tanana River downstream from the Nenana River;
(D) Unit 20D consists of that portion of Unit 20 bounded on the
east by the east bank of the Robertson River and on the west by the
west bank of the Delta River, and drainages into the north bank of the
Tanana River from its confluence with the Robertson River downstream
to, but excluding, the Banner Creek drainage;
(E) Unit 20E consists of drainages into the south bank of the Yukon
River upstream from and including the Charley River drainage, and the
Ladue River drainage;
(F) Unit 20F consists of the remainder of Unit 20.
(ii) In the following areas, the taking of wildlife for subsistence
uses is prohibited or restricted on public land:
(A) You may not take wildlife for subsistence uses on lands within
Mount McKinley National Park as it existed prior to December 2, 1980.
Subsistence uses as authorized by this paragraph (n)(20) are permitted
in Denali National Preserve and lands added to Denali National Park on
December 2, 1980;
(B) You may not use motorized vehicles or pack animals for hunting
from Aug. 5-25 in the Delta Controlled Use Area, the boundary of which
is defined as: a line beginning at the confluence of Miller Creek and
the Delta River, then west to vertical angle benchmark Miller, then
west to include all drainages of Augustana Creek and Black Rapids
Glacier, then north and east to include all drainages of McGinnis Creek
to its confluence with the Delta River, then east in a straight line
across the Delta River to Mile 236.7 of the Richardson Highway, then
north along the Richardson Highway to its junction with the Alaska
Highway, then east along the Alaska Highway to the west bank of the
Johnson River, then south along the west bank of the Johnson River and
Johnson Glacier to the head of the Canwell Glacier, then west along the
north bank of the Canwell Glacier and Miller Creek to the Delta River;
(C) You may not use firearms, snowmobiles, licensed highway
vehicles or motorized vehicles, except aircraft and boats, in the
Dalton Highway Corridor Management Area, which consists of those
portions of Units 20, 24, 25, and 26 extending 5 miles from each side
of the Dalton Highway from the Yukon River to milepost 300 of the
Dalton Highway, except as follows: Residents living within the Dalton
Highway Corridor Management Area may use snowmobiles only for the
subsistence
[[Page 73467]]
taking of wildlife. You may use licensed highway vehicles only on
designated roads within the Dalton Highway Corridor Management Area.
The residents of Alatna, Allakaket, Anaktuvuk Pass, Bettles,
Evansville, Stevens Village, and residents living within the Corridor
may use firearms within the Corridor only for subsistence taking of
wildlife;
(D) You may not use any motorized vehicle for hunting from August
5-September 20 in the Glacier Mountain Controlled Use Area, which
consists of that portion of Unit 20E bounded by a line beginning at
Mile 140 of the Taylor Highway, then north along the highway to Eagle,
then west along the cat trail from Eagle to Crooked Creek, then from
Crooked Creek southwest along the west bank of Mogul Creek to its
headwaters on North Peak, then west across North Peak to the headwaters
of Independence Creek, then southwest along the west bank of
Independence Creek to its confluence with the North Fork of the
Fortymile River, then easterly along the south bank of the North Fork
of the Fortymile River to its confluence with Champion Creek, then
across the North Fork of the Fortymile River to the south bank of
Champion Creek and easterly along the south bank of Champion Creek to
its confluence with Little Champion Creek, then northeast along the
east bank of Little Champion Creek to its headwaters, then
northeasterly in a direct line to Mile 140 on the Taylor Highway;
however, this does not prohibit motorized access via, or transportation
of harvested wildlife on, the Taylor Highway or any airport;
(E) You may by permit hunt moose on the Minto Flats Management
Area, which consists of that portion of Unit 20 bounded by the Elliot
Highway beginning at Mile 118, then northeasterly to Mile 96, then east
to the Tolovana Hotsprings Dome, then east to the Winter Cat Trail,
then along the Cat Trail south to the Old Telegraph Trail at Dunbar,
then westerly along the trail to a point where it joins the Tanana
River 3 miles above Old Minto, then along the north bank of the Tanana
River (including all channels and sloughs except Swan Neck Slough), to
the confluence of the Tanana and Tolovana Rivers and then northerly to
the point of beginning;
(F) You may only hunt moose by bow and arrow in the Fairbanks
Management Area. The Area consists of that portion of Unit 20B bounded
by a line from the confluence of Rosie Creek and the Tanana River,
northerly along Rosie Creek to Isberg Road, then northeasterly on
Isberg Road to Cripple Creek Road, then northeasterly on Cripple Creek
Road to the Parks Highway, then north on the Parks Highway to Alder
Creek, then westerly to the middle fork of Rosie Creek through section
26 to the Parks Highway, then east along the Parks Highway to Alder
Creek, then upstream along Alder Creek to its confluence with Emma
Creek, then upstream along Emma Creek to its headwaters, then northerly
along the hydrographic divide between Goldstream Creek drainages and
Cripple Creek drainages to the summit of Ester Dome, then down Sheep
Creek to its confluence with Goldstream Creek, then easterly along
Goldstream Creek to Sheep Creek Road, then north on Sheep Creek Road to
Murphy Dome Road, then west on Murphy Dome Road to Old Murphy Dome
Road, then east on Old Murphy Dome Road to the Elliot Highway, then
south on the Elliot Highway to Goldstream Creek, then easterly along
Goldstream Creek to its confluence with First Chance Creek, Davidson
Ditch, then southeasterly along the Davidson Ditch to its confluence
with the tributary to Goldstream Creek in Section 29, then downstream
along the tributary to its confluence with Goldstream Creek, then in a
straight line to First Chance Creek, then up First Chance Creek to
Tungsten Hill, then southerly along Steele Creek to its confluence with
Ruby Creek, then upstream along Ruby Creek to Esro Road, then south on
Esro Road to Chena Hot Springs Road, then east on Chena Hot Springs
Road to Nordale Road, then south on Nordale Road to the Chena River, to
its intersection with the Trans-Alaska Pipeline right of way, then
southeasterly along the easterly edge of the Trans-Alaska Pipeline
right of way to the Chena River, then along the north bank of the Chena
River to the Moose Creek dike, then southerly along the Moose Creek
dike to its intersection with the Tanana River, and then westerly along
the north bank of the Tanana River to the point of beginning.
(iii) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) You may use bait to hunt black bear from April 15-June 30; you
may use bait to hunt wolves on FWS and BLM lands;
(B) You may not use a steel trap, or a snare using cable smaller
than 3/32 inch diameter to trap coyotes or wolves in Unit 20E during
April and October;
(C) Residents of Units 20 and 21 may take up to three moose per
regulatory year for the celebration known as the Nuchalawoyya Potlatch,
under the terms of a Federal registration permit. Permits will be
issued to individuals at the request of the Native Village of Tanana
only. This three-moose limit is not cumulative with that permitted by
the State.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear:
3 bears....................... July 1-June 30.
Brown Bear:
Unit 20A--1 bear.............. Sept. 1-May 31.
Unit 20E--1 bear.............. Aug. 10-June 30.
Unit 20--remainder--1 bear.... Sept. 1-May 31.
Caribou:
Unit 20E--1 caribou by joint Aug. 10-Sept. 30.
State/Federal registration Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
permit only. Up to 900
caribou may be taken under a
State/Federal harvest quota.
During the winter season,
area closures or hunt
restrictions may be announced
when Nelchina caribou are
present in a mix of more than
1 Nelchina caribou to 15
Fortymile caribou, except
when the number of caribou
present is low enough that
less than 50 Nelchina caribou
will be harvested regardless
of the mixing ratio for the
two herds. The season
closures will be announced by
the Eastern Interior Field
Office Manager, Bureau of
Land Management, after
consultation with the
National Park Service and
Alaska Department of Fish and
Game.
Unit 20F--north of the Yukon Aug. 10-Mar. 31.
River--1 caribou.
Unit 20F--east of the Dalton Aug. 10-Sept. 20
Highway and south of the Nov. 1-Mar. 31.
Yukon River--1 caribou;
however, cow caribou may be
taken only from Nov. 1-March
31. During the November 1-
March 31 season, a State
registration permit is
required.
Moose:
[[Page 73468]]
Unit 20A--1 antlered bull..... Sept. 1-20.
Unit 20B--that portion within Sept. 1-20.
the Minto Flats Management Jan. 10-Feb. 28.
Area--1 bull by Federal
registration permit only.
Unit 20B--remainder--1 Sept. 1-20.
antlered bull.
Unit 20C--that portion within Sept. 1-30
Denali National Park and Nov. 15-Dec. 15.
Preserve west of the Toklat
River, excluding lands within
Mount McKinley National Park
as it existed prior to
December 2, 1980--1 antlered
bull; however, white-phased
or partial albino (more than
50 percent white) moose may
not be taken.
Unit 20C--remainder--1 Sept. 1-30.
antlered bull; however, white-
phased or partial albino
(more than 50 percent white)
moose may not be taken.
Unit 20E--that portion within Aug. 20-Sept. 30.
Yukon-Charley National
Preserve--1 bull.
Unit 20E--that portion drained Aug. 24-28
by the Forty-mile River (all Sept. 1-15.
forks) from Mile 9\1/2\ to
Mile 145 Taylor Highway,
including the Boundary Cutoff
Road--1 bull.
Unit 20F--that portion within Sept. 1-25.
the Dalton Highway Corridor
Management Area--1 antlered
bull by Federal registration
permit only.
Unit 20F--remainder--1 Sept. 1-25
antlered bull. Dec. 1-10.
Beaver:
Unit 20E--Yukon-Charley Rivers Sept. 20-May 15.
National Preserve--6 beaver
per season. Meat from
harvested beaver must be
salvaged for human
consumption.
Coyote:
10 coyotes.................... Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black
and Silver Phases):
10 foxes; however, no more Sept. 1-Mar. 15.
than 2 foxes may be taken
prior to Oct. 1.
Hare (Snowshoe):
No limit...................... July 1-June 30.
Lynx:
Unit 20A, 20B, and that Dec. 1-Jan. 31.
portion of 20C east of the
Teklanika River--2 lynx.
Unit 20E--2 lynx.............. Nov. 1-Jan. 31.
Unit 20--remainder--2 lynx.... Dec. 1-Jan. 31.
Muskrat:
Unit 20E, that portion within Sept. 20-June 10.
Yukon-Charley Rivers National
Preserve--No limit.
Unit 20--remainder............ No open season.
Wolf:
10 wolves..................... Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Wolverine:
1 wolverine................... Sept. 1-Mar. 31.
Grouse (Spruce, Ruffed, and Sharp-
tailed):
Units 20A, 20B, 20C, 20E, and Aug. 10-Mar. 31.
20F-15 per day, 30 in
possession.
Ptarmigan (Rock and Willow):..
Unit 20--those portions within Aug. 10-Mar. 31.
5 miles of Alaska Route 5
(Taylor Highway, both to
Eagle and the Alaska-Canada
boundary) and that portion of
Alaska Route 4 (Richardson
Highway) south of Delta
Junction--20 per day, 40 in
possession.
Unit 20--remainder--20 per Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
day, 40 in possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver:
Units 20A, 20B, 20C, and 20F-- Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
No limit.
Unit 20E-25 beaver per season. Sept. 20-May 15.
Only firearms may be used
during Sept. 20-Oct. 31 and
Apr. 16-May 15, to take up to
6 beaver. Only traps or
snares may be used Nov. 1-
Apr. 15. The total annual
harvest limit for beaver is
25, of which no more than 6
may be taken by firearm under
trapping or hunting
regulations. Meat from beaver
harvested by firearm must be
salvaged for human
consumption.
Coyote:
Unit 20E--No limit............ Oct. 15-Apr. 30.
Unit 20--remainder--No limit.. Nov. 1-Mar. 31.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black
and Silver Phases):
No limit...................... Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Lynx:
Unit 20A, 20B, and 20C east of Dec. 15-Feb. 15.
the Teklanika River--No limit.
Unit 20E--No limit; however, Nov. 1-Dec. 31.
no more than 5 lynx may be
taken between Nov. 1 and Nov.
30.
Unit 20F and 20C--remainder-- Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
No limit.
Marten:
No limit...................... Nov. 1--Feb. 28.
Mink and Weasel:
No limit...................... Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Muskrat:
Unit 20E--No limit............ Sept. 20-June 10.
Unit 20--remainder--No limit.. Nov. 1-June 10.
Otter:
No limit...................... Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Wolf:.........................
Unit 20A, 20B, 20C, & 20F--No Nov. 1-Apr. 30.
limit.
Unit 20E--No limit............ Oct. 1-Apr. 30.
Wolverine:
[[Page 73469]]
No limit...................... Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(21) Unit 21. (i) Unit 21 consists of drainages into the Yukon
River upstream from Paimiut to, but not including, the Tozitna River
drainage on the north bank, and to, but not including, the Tanana River
drainage on the south bank; and excluding the Koyukuk River drainage
upstream from the Dulbi River drainage:
(A) Unit 21A consists of the Innoko River drainage upstream from
and including the Iditarod River drainage;
(B) Unit 21B consists of the Yukon River drainage upstream from
Ruby and east of the Ruby-Poorman Road, downstream from and excluding
the Tozitna River and Tanana River drainages, and excluding the
Melozitna River drainage upstream from Grayling Creek;
(C) Unit 21C consists of the Melozitna River drainage upstream from
Grayling Creek, and the Dulbi River drainage upstream from and
including the Cottonwood Creek drainage;
(D) Unit 21D consists of the Yukon River drainage from and
including the Blackburn Creek drainage upstream to Ruby, including the
area west of the Ruby-Poorman Road, excluding the Koyukuk River
drainage upstream from the Dulbi River drainage, and excluding the
Dulbi River drainage upstream from Cottonwood Creek;
(E) Unit 21E consists of the Yukon River drainage from Paimiut
upstream to, but not including, the Blackburn Creek drainage, and the
Innoko River drainage downstream from the Iditarod River drainage.
(ii) In the following areas, the taking of wildlife for subsistence
uses is prohibited or restricted on public land:
(A) The Koyukuk Controlled Use Area, which consists of those
portions of Unit 21 and 24 bounded by a line from the north bank of the
Yukon River at Koyukuk at 64[deg]52.58' N. lat., 157[deg]43.10' W.
long., then northerly to the confluences of the Honhosa and Kateel
Rivers at 65[deg]28.42' N. lat., 157[deg]44.89' W. long., then
northeasterly to the confluences of Billy Hawk Creek and the Huslia
River (65[deg]57 N. lat., 156[deg]41 W. long.) at 65[deg]56.66' N.
lat., 156[deg]40.81' W. long., then easterly to the confluence of the
forks of the Dakli River at 66[deg]02.56' N. lat., 156[deg]12.71' W.
long., then easterly to the confluence of McLanes Creek and the Hogatza
River at 66[deg]00.31' N. lat., 155[deg]18.57'W. long., then
southwesterly to the crest of Hochandochtla Mountain at 65[deg]31.87'
N. lat., 154[deg]52.18' W. long., then southwest to the mouth of
Cottonwood Creek at 65[deg]13.00' N. lat., 156[deg]06.43' W. long.,
then southwest to Bishop Rock (Yistletaw) at 64[deg]49.35' N. lat.,
157[deg]21.73' W. long., then westerly along the north bank of the
Yukon River (including Koyukuk Island) to the point of beginning, is
closed during moose hunting seasons to the use of aircraft for hunting
moose, including transportation of any moose hunter or moose part;
however, this does not apply to transportation of a moose hunter or
moose part by aircraft between publicly owned airports in the
controlled use area or between a publicly owned airport within the area
and points outside the area; all hunters on the Koyukuk River passing
the ADF&G-operated check station at Ella's Cabin (15 miles upstream
from the Yukon on the Koyukuk River) are required to stop and report to
ADF&G personnel at the check station;
(B) The Paradise Controlled Use Area, which consists of that
portion of Unit 21 bounded by a line beginning at the old village of
Paimiut, then north along the west bank of the Yukon River to Paradise,
then northwest to the mouth of Stanstrom Creek on the Bonasila River,
then northeast to the mouth of the Anvik River, then along the west
bank of the Yukon River to the lower end of Eagle Island (approximately
45 miles north of Grayling), then to the mouth of the Iditarod River,
then down the east bank of the Innoko River to its confluence with
Paimiut Slough, then south along the east bank of Paimiut Slough to its
mouth, and then to the old village of Paimiut, is closed during moose
hunting seasons to the use of aircraft for hunting moose, including
transportation of any moose hunter or part of moose; however, this does
not apply to transportation of a moose hunter or part of moose by
aircraft between publicly owned airports in the Controlled Use Area or
between a publicly owned airport within the area and points outside the
area.
(iii) In Unit 21D, you may hunt brown bear by State registration
permit in lieu of a resident tag if you have obtained a State
registration permit prior to hunting. Aircraft may not be used in any
manner for brown bear hunting under the authority of a brown bear State
registration permit, including transportation of hunters, bears, or
parts of bears; however, this does not apply to transportation of bear
hunters or bear parts by regularly scheduled flights to and between
communities by carriers that normally provide scheduled service to this
area, nor does it apply to transportation of aircraft to or between
publicly owned airports.
(iv) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) You may use bait to hunt black bear between April 15 and June
30; and in the Koyukuk Controlled Use Area, you may also use bait to
hunt black bear between September 1 and September 25;
(B) If you have a trapping license, you may use a firearm to take
beaver in Unit 21(E) from Nov. 1-June 10;
(C) The residents of Units 20 and 21 may take up to three moose per
regulatory year for the celebration known as the Nuchalawoyya Potlatch,
under the terms of a Federal registration permit. Permits will be
issued to individuals only at the request of the Native Village of
Tanana. This three moose limit is not cumulative with that permitted by
the State;
(D) The residents of Unit 21 may take up to three moose per
regulatory year for the celebration known as the Kaltag/Nulato
Stickdance, under the terms of a Federal registration permit. Permits
will be issued to individuals only at the request of the Native Village
of Kaltag or Nulato. This three moose limit is not cumulative with that
permitted by the State.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear: 3 bears............... July 1-June 30.
Brown Bear:
Unit 21D--1 bear by State Aug. 10-June 30.
registration permit only.
Unit 21--remainder--1 bear.... Aug. 10-June 30.
[[Page 73470]]
Caribou:
Unit 21A--1 caribou........... Aug. 10-Sept. 30.
Dec. 10-Dec. 20.
Unit 21B--that portion north No open season.
of the Yukon River and
downstream from Ukawutni
Creek.
Unit 21C--the Dulbi and No open season.
Melozitna River drainages
downstream from Big Creek.
Unit 21B remainder, 21C Aug. 10-Sept. 30.
remainder, and 21E--1 caribou.
Unit 21D--north of the Yukon Winter season to be announced.
River and east of the Koyukuk
River--caribou may be taken
during a winter season to be
announced by the Refuge
Manager of the Koyukuk/
Nowitna National Wildlife
Refuge Manager and the BLM
Central Yukon Field Office
Manager, in consultation with
ADF&G and the Chairs of the
Western Interior Subsistence
Regional Advisory Council,
and the Middle Yukon and Ruby
Fish and Game Advisory
Committees.
Unit 21D--remainder--5 caribou July 1-June 30
per day; however, cow caribou
may not be taken May 16-June
30..
Moose:
Unit 21B--that part of the Sept. 5-Oct. 1.
Nowitna River drainage
downstream from and including
the Little Mud River
drainage--1 bull. A State
registration permit is
required from Sept. 5-25. A
Federal registration permit
is required from Sept. 26-
Oct. 1.
Unit 21B--that part of the Five-day season to be announced
Nowitna River drainage between Dec. 1 and March 31.
downstream from and including
the Little Mud River
drainage--1 antlered bull. A
Federal registration permit
is required during the 5-day
season and will be limited to
one per household. The 5-day
season may be announced by
the Koyukuk/Nowitna National
Wildlife Refuge Manager after
consultation with the ADF&G
and the Chairs of the Western
Interior Regional Advisory
Council and the Ruby Fish and
Game Advisory Committee.
Unit 21A and 21B--remainder--1 Aug. 20-Sept. 25.
bull. Nov. 1-30.
Unit 21C--1 antlered bull..... Sept. 5-25.
Unit 21D--Koyukuk Controlled Aug. 27-Sept. 20.
Use Area--1 moose; however, Mar. 1-5 season to be announced.
antlerless moose may be taken
only during Aug. 27-31 and
the Mar. 1-5 season if
authorized by announcement by
the Koyukuk/Nowitna National
Wildlife Refuge Manager.
Harvest of cow moose
accompanied by calves is
prohibited. During the Aug.
27-Sept. 20 season a State
registration permit is
required. During the Mar. 1-5
season a Federal registration
permit is required.
Announcement for the
antlerless moose seasons and
cow quotas will be made after
consultation with the ADF&G
area biologist and the Chairs
of the Western Interior
Regional Advisory Council and
Middle Yukon Fish and Game
Advisory Committee.
Unit 21D--remainder--1 moose; Aug. 22-31.
however, antlerless moose may Sept. 5-25.
be taken only during Sept. 21- Mar. 1-5 season to be announced.
25 and the Mar. 1-5 season if
authorized jointly by the
Koyukuk/Nowitna National
Wildlife Refuge Manager and
the Central Yukon Field
Office Manager, Bureau of
Land Management. Harvest of
cow moose accompanied by
calves is prohibited. During
the Aug. 22-31 and Sept. 5-25
seasons, a State registration
permit is required. During
the Mar. 1-5 season a Federal
registration permit is
required. Announcement for
the antlerless moose seasons
and cow quotas will be made
after consultation with the
ADF&G area biologist and the
Chairs of the Western
Interior Regional Advisory
Council and the Middle Yukon
Fish and Game Advisory
Committee.
Unit 21E-1 moose; however, Aug. 20-Sept. 25.
only bulls may be taken from Feb. 1-10.
Aug. 20-Sept. 25; moose may
not be taken within one-half
mile of the Innoko or Yukon
River during the February
season.
Beaver:
Unit 21E--No Limit............ Nov. 1-June 10.
Unit 21--remainder............ No open season.
Coyote: 10 coyotes................ Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black Sept. 1-Mar. 15.
and Silver Phases): 10 foxes;
however, no more than 2 foxes may
be taken prior to Oct. 1.
Hare (Snowshoe and Tundra): No July 1-June 30.
limit.
Lynx: 2 lynx...................... Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Wolf: 5 wolves.................... Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: 1 wolverine............ Sept. 1-Mar. 31.
Grouse (Spruce, Ruffed, and Sharp- Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
tailed): 15 per day, 30 in
possession.
Ptarmigan (Rock, Willow, and White- Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
tailed): 20 per day, 40 in
possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver: No Limit.................. Nov. 1-June 10.
Coyote: No limit.................. Nov. 1-Mar. 31.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
and Silver Phases): No limit.
Lynx: No limit.................... Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Marten: No limit.................. Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Mink and Weasel: No limit......... Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Muskrat: No limit................. Nov. 1-June 10.
Otter: No limit................... Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Wolf: No limit.................... Nov. 1-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: No limit............... Nov. 1-Mar. 31.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(22) Unit 22. (i) Unit 22 consists of Bering Sea, Norton Sound,
Bering Strait, Chukchi Sea, and Kotzebue Sound drainages from, but
excluding, the Pastolik River drainage in southern Norton Sound to, but
not including, the Goodhope River drainage in Southern Kotzebue Sound,
and all adjacent islands in the Bering Sea between the mouths of the
Goodhope and Pastolik Rivers:
(A) Unit 22A consists of Norton Sound drainages from, but
excluding, the Pastolik River drainage to, and
[[Page 73471]]
including, the Ungalik River drainage, and Stuart and Besboro Islands;
(B) Unit 22B consists of Norton Sound drainages from, but
excluding, the Ungalik River drainage to, and including, the Topkok
Creek drainage;
(C) Unit 22C consists of Norton Sound and Bering Sea drainages
from, but excluding, the Topkok Creek drainage to, and including, the
Tisuk River drainage, and King and Sledge Islands;
(D) Unit 22D consists of that portion of Unit 22 draining into the
Bering Sea north of, but not including, the Tisuk River to and
including Cape York and St. Lawrence Island;
(E) Unit 22E consists of Bering Sea, Bering Strait, Chukchi Sea,
and Kotzebue Sound drainages from Cape York to, but excluding, the
Goodhope River drainage, and including Little Diomede Island and
Fairway Rock.
(ii) You may hunt brown bear by State registration permit in lieu
of a resident tag if you have obtained a State registration permit
prior to hunting. Aircraft may not be used in any manner for brown bear
hunting under the authority of a brown bear State registration permit,
including transportation of hunters, bears, or parts of bears; however,
this does not apply to transportation of bear hunters or bear parts by
regularly scheduled flights to and between communities by carriers that
normally provide scheduled service to this area, nor does it apply to
transportation of aircraft to or between publicly owned airports.
(iii) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) If you have a trapping license, you may use a firearm to take
beaver in Unit 22 during the established seasons;
(B) Coyote, incidentally taken with a trap or snare intended for
red fox or wolf, may be used for subsistence purposes;
(C) A snowmachine may be used to position a hunter to select
individual caribou for harvest provided that the animals are not shot
from a moving snowmachine;
(D) The taking of one bull moose and one musk ox by the community
of Wales is allowed for the celebration of the Kingikmiut Dance
Festival under the terms of a Federal registration permit. Permits will
be issued to individuals only at the request of the Native Village of
Wales. The harvest may only occur between January 1 and March 15 in
Unit 22E for a bull moose and in Unit 22E for a musk ox. The harvest
will count against any established quota for the area;
(E) A Federally qualified subsistence user (recipient) may
designate another Federally qualified subsistence user to take musk
oxen on his or her behalf unless the recipient is a member of a
community operating under a community harvest system. The designated
hunter must get a designated hunter permit and must return a completed
harvest report. The designated hunter may hunt for any number of
recipients in the course of a season, but have no more than two harvest
limits in his/her possession at any one time, except in Unit 22E where
a resident of Wales or Shishmaref acting as a designated hunter may
hunt for any number of recipients, but have no more than four harvest
limits in his/her possession at any one time.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear:
Unit 22A and 22B--3 bears..... July 1-June 30.
Unit 22--remainder............ No open season.
Brown Bear:
Unit 22A, 22B, 22D, and 22E--1 Aug. 1-May 31.
bear by State registration
permit only.
Unit 22C-1 bear by State Aug. 1-Oct. 31.
registration permit only.
May 10-25.
Caribou:
Unit 22B west of Golovin Bay Oct. 1-Apr. 30.
and west of a line along the May 1-Sept. 30, a season may be
west bank of the Fish and opened by announcement by the
Niukluk Rivers and excluding Anchorage Field Office Manager of
the Libby River drainage--5 the BLM, in consultation with
caribou per day. ADF&G.
Units 22A, 22B remainder, that July 1-June 30.
portion of Unit 22D in the
Kougaruk, Kuzitrin (excluding
the Pilgrim River drainage),
American, and Agiapuk River
Drainages, and Unit 22E, that
portion east of and including
the Sanaguich River drainage--
5 caribou per day; however,
cow caribou may not be taken
May 16-June 30.
Moose:
Unit 22A--that portion north Aug. 1-Sept. 30.
of and including the
Tagoomenik and Shaktoolik
River drainages--1 bull.
Federal public lands are
closed to hunting except by
residents of Unit 22A hunting
under these regulations.
Unit 22A--that portion in the No open season.
Unalakleet drainage and all
drainages flowing into Norton
Sound north of the Golsovia
River drainage and south of
the Tagoomenik and Shaktoolik
River drainages--Federal
public lands are closed to
the taking of moose.
Unit 22A--remainder--1 bull. Aug. 1-Sept. 30.
However, during the period Jan. 1-31.
Jan. 1-31, only an antlered
bull may be taken. Federal
public lands are closed to
the taking of moose except by
residents of Unit 22A hunting
under these regulations.
Unit 22B--west of the Darby Sept. 1-14.
Mountains--1 bull by State
registration permit. Quotas
and any needed closures will
be announced by the Anchorage
Field Office Manager of the
BLM, in consultation with NPS
and ADF&G. Federal public
lands are closed to the
taking of moose except by
Federally qualified
subsistence users hunting
under these regulations.
Unit 22B--west of the Darby Jan. 1-31.
Mountains--1 bull by either
Federal or State registration
permit. Quotas and any needed
season closures will be
announced by the Anchorage
Field Office Manager of the
BLM, in consultation with
NPS, and ADF&G.
Federal public lands are ....................................
closed to the taking of moose
except by residents of White
Mountain and Golovin hunting
under these regulations.
Unit 22B--remainder--1 bull... Aug. 1-Jan. 31.
[[Page 73472]]
Unit 22C--1 antlered bull..... Sept. 1-14.
Unit 22D--that portion within Sept. 1-14.
the Kougarok, Kuzitrin, and
Pilgrim River drainages--1
bull by State registration
permit. Quotas and any needed
closures will be announced by
the Anchorage Field Office
Manager of the BLM, in
consultation with NPS and
ADF&G. Federal public lands
are closed to the taking of
moose except by residents of
Units 22D and 22C hunting
under these regulations.
Unit 22D--that portion west of Sept. 1-14.
the Tisuk River drainage and
Canyon Creek--1 bull by State
registration permit. Quotas
and any needed closures will
be announced by the Anchorage
Field Office Manager of the
BLM, in consultation with NPS
and ADF&G.
Unit 22D--that portion west of Dec. 1-31.
the Tisuk River drainage and
Canyon Creek--1 bull by
Federal registration permit.
Quotas and any needed
closures will be announced by
the Anchorage Field Office
Manager of the BLM, in
consultation with NPS and
ADF&G. Federal public lands
are closed to the taking of
moose except by residents of
Units 22D and 22C hunting
under these regulations.
Unit 22D--remainder--1 bull... Aug. 10-Sept. 14.
Oct. 1-Nov. 30.
Unit 22D--remainder--1 moose; Dec. 1-31.
however, no person may take a
calf or a cow accompanied by
a calf.
Unit 22D--remainder--1 Jan. 1-31.
antlered bull..
Unit 22E--1 bull. Federal Aug. 1-Dec. 31.
public lands are closed to
the taking of moose except by
Federally qualified
subsistence users hunting
under these regulations.
Musk ox:
Unit 22B--1 bull by Federal Aug. 1-Mar. 15.
permit or State Tier II
permit. Federal public lands
are closed to the taking of
musk ox except by Federally
qualified subsistence users
hunting under these
regulations. Annual harvest
quotas and any needed
closures will be announced by
the Superintendent of the
Western Arctic National
Parklands, in consultation
with ADF&G and the BLM Field
Office Manager.
Unit 22D--that portion west of Sept. 1-Mar. 15.
the Tisuk River drainage and
Canyon Creek--1 musk ox by
Federal permit or State Tier
II permit; however, cows may
only be taken during the
period Jan. 1-Mar. 15.
Federal public lands are
closed to the taking of musk
ox except by Federally
qualified subsistence users
hunting under these
regulations. Annual harvest
quotas and any needed
closures will be announced by
the Superintendent of the
Western Arctic National
Parklands, in consultation
with ADF&G and BLM.
Unit 22D--remainder--1 musk ox Aug. 1-Mar. 15.
by Federal permit or State
Tier II permit; however, cows
may only be taken during the
period Jan. 1-Mar. 15.
Federal public lands are
closed to the taking of musk
ox except by Federally
qualified subsistence users
hunting under these
regulations. Annual harvest
quotas and any needed
closures will be announced by
the Superintendent of the
Western Arctic National
Parklands, in consultation
with ADF&G and BLM.
Unit 22E--1 musk ox by Federal Aug. 1-Mar. 15.
permit or State permit;
however, cows may only be
taken during the period Jan.
1-Mar. 15. Federal public
lands are closed to the
taking of musk ox except by
Federally qualified
subsistence users hunting
under these regulations.
Annual harvest quotas and any
needed closures will be
announced by the
Superintendent of the Western
Arctic National Parklands, in
consultation with ADF&G and
BLM.
Unit 22--remainder............ No open season.
Beaver:
Unit 22A, 22B, 22D, and 22E-- Nov. 1-June 10.
50 beaver.
Unit 22--remainder............ No open season.
Coyote: Federal public lands are No open season.
closed to all taking of coyotes.
Fox, Arctic (Blue and White Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Phase): 2 foxes.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
and Silver Phases): 10 foxes.
Hare (Snowshoe and Tundra): No Sept. 1-Apr. 15.
limit.
Lynx: 2 lynx...................... Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Marten:
Unit 22A and 22B--No limit.... Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Unit 22--remainder............ No open season.
Mink and Weasel: No limit......... Nov. 1-Jan. 31.
Otter: No limit................... Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Wolf: No limit.................... Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Wolverine: 3 wolverines........... Sept. 1-Mar. 31.
Grouse (Spruce): 15 per day, 30 in Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
possession.
Ptarmigan (Rock and Willow):
Unit 22A and 22B east of and Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
including the Niukluk River
drainage--40 per day, 80 in
possession.
Unit 22E--20 per day, 40 in July 15-May 15.
possession.
Unit 22--remainder--20 per Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
day, 40 in possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver:
Unit 22A, 22B, 22D, and 22E-- Nov. 1-June 10.
50 beaver.
Unit 22C...................... No open season.
Coyote: Federal public lands are No open season.
closed to all taking of coyotes.
Fox, Arctic (Blue and White Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Phase): No limit.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
and Silver Phases): No limit.
Lynx: No limit.................... Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Marten: No limit.................. Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Mink and Weasel: No limit......... Nov. 1-Jan. 31.
Muskrat: No limit................. Nov. 1-June 10.
Otter: No limit................... Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
[[Page 73473]]
Wolf: No limit.................... Nov. 1-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: No limit............... Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(23) Unit 23. (i) Unit 23 consists of Kotzebue Sound, Chukchi Sea,
and Arctic Ocean drainages from and including the Goodhope River
drainage to Cape Lisburne.
(ii) In the following areas, the taking of wildlife for subsistence
uses is prohibited or restricted on public land:
(A) You may not use aircraft in any manner either for hunting of
ungulates, bear, wolves, or wolverine, or for transportation of hunters
or harvested species in the Noatak Controlled Use Area for the period
August 25-September 15. The Area consists of that portion of Unit 23 in
a corridor extending five miles on either side of the Noatak River
beginning at the mouth of the Noatak River, and extending upstream to
the mouth of Sapun Creek. This closure does not apply to the
transportation of hunters or parts of ungulates, bear, wolves, or
wolverine by regularly scheduled flights to communities by carriers
that normally provide scheduled air service.
(B) [Reserved]
(iii) You may hunt brown bear by State registration permit in lieu
of a resident tag if you have obtained a State registration permit
prior to hunting. Aircraft may not be used in any manner for brown bear
hunting under the authority of a brown bear State registration permit,
including transportation of hunters, bears, or parts of bears; however,
this does not apply to transportation of bear hunters or bear parts by
regularly scheduled flights to and between communities by carriers that
normally provide scheduled service to this area, nor does it apply to
transportation of aircraft to or between publicly owned airports.
(iv) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) You may take caribou from a boat moving under power in Unit 23;
(B) In addition to other restrictions on method of take found in
this Sec. ----.26, you may also take swimming caribou with a firearm
using rimfire cartridges;
(C) If you have a trapping license, you may take beaver with a
firearm in all of Unit 23 from Nov. 1-Jun. 10;
(D) For the Baird and DeLong Mountain sheep hunts--A Federally
qualified subsistence user (recipient) may designate another Federally
qualified subsistence user to take sheep on his or her behalf unless
the recipient is a member of a community operating under a community
harvest system. The designated hunter must obtain a designated hunter
permit and must return a completed harvest report. The designated
hunter may hunt for only one recipient in the course of a season and
may have both his and the recipients' harvest limits in his/her
possession at the same time;
(E) A snowmachine may be used to position a hunter to select
individual caribou for harvest provided that the animals are not shot
from a moving snowmachine;
(F) A Federally qualified subsistence user (recipient) may
designate another Federally qualified subsistence user to take musk
oxen on his or her behalf unless the recipient is a member of a
community operating under a community harvest system. The designated
hunter must get a designated hunter permit and must return a completed
harvest report. The designated hunter may hunt for any number of
recipients, but have no more than two harvest limits in his/her
possession at any one time.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear: 3 bears................. July 1-June 30.
Brown Bear: Unit 23--1 bear by State Aug. 1-May 31.
registration permit.
Caribou: 15 caribou per day; July 1-June 30.
however, cow caribou may not be
taken May 16-June 30.
Sheep:
Unit 23--south of Rabbit Creek, Aug. 10-April 30. If the allowable
Kyak Creek, and the Noatak harvest levels are reached before
River, and west of the Cutler the regular season closing date,
and Redstone Rivers (Baird the Superintendent of the Western
Mountains)--1 sheep by Federal Arctic National Parklands will
registration permit. The total announce an early closure.
allowable harvest of sheep is
21, of which 15 may be rams and
6 may be ewes. Federal public
lands are closed to the taking
of sheep except by Federally
qualified subsistence users
hunting under these regulations.
Unit 23--north of Rabbit Creek, Aug. 10-April 30. If the allowable
Kyak Creek, and the Noatak harvest levels are reached before
River, and west of the Aniuk the regular season closing date,
River (DeLong Mountains)--1 the Superintendent of the Western
sheep by Federal registration Arctic National Parklands will
permit. The total allowable announce an early closure.
harvest of sheep for the DeLong
Mountains is 8, of which 5 may
be rams and 3 may be ewes.
Unit 23, remainder (Schwatka Aug. 10-Sept. 20.
Mountains)--1 ram with \7/8\
curl or larger horn.
Unit 23, remainder (Schwatka Oct. 1-Apr. 30.
Mountains)--1 sheep.
[[Page 73474]]
Moose:
Unit 23--that portion north and July 1-Mar. 31.
west of and including the
Singoalik River drainage, and
all lands draining into the
Kukpuk and Ipewik Rivers--1
moose; no person may take a
calf or a cow accompanied by a
calf.
Unit 23--that portion lying Aug. 1-Mar. 31.
within the Noatak River
drainage--1 moose; however,
antlerless moose may be taken
only from Nov. 1-Mar. 31; no
person may take a calf or a cow
accompanied by a calf.
Unit 23--remainder--1 moose; no Aug. 1-Mar. 31.
person may take a calf or a cow
accompanied by a calf.
Musk ox:
Unit 23--south of Kotzebue Sound Aug. 1-Mar. 15.
and west of and including the
Buckland River drainage--1 musk
ox by Federal permit or State
Tier II permit; however, cows
may only be taken during the
period Jan. 1-Mar. 15. Federal
public lands are closed to the
taking of musk ox except by
Federally qualified subsistence
users hunting under these
regulations. Annual harvest
quotas and any needed closures
will be announced by the
Superintendent of the Western
Arctic National Parklands, in
consultation with ADF&G and BLM.
Unit 23--Cape Krusenstern Aug. 1-Mar. 15.
National Monument--1 bull by
Federal permit. Annual harvest
quotas and any needed closures
will be announced by the
Superintendent of Western
Arctic National Parklands. Cape
Krusenstern National Monument
is closed to the taking of musk
oxen except by resident zone
community members with
permanent residence within the
Monument or the immediately
adjacent Napaktuktuk Mountain
area, south of latitude
67[deg]05'N and west of
longitude 162[deg]30'W hunting
under these regulations.
Unit 23--remainder.............. No open season.
Beaver: No limit.................... July 1-June 30.
Coyote: 2 coyotes................... Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Fox, Arctic (Blue and White Phase): Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
No limit.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black and Sept. 1-Mar. 15.
Silver Phases): No limit.
Hare: (Snowshoe and Tundra) No limit July 1-June 30.
Lynx: 2 lynx........................ Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Wolf: 15 wolves..................... Oct. 1-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: 1 wolverine.............. Sept. 1-Mar. 31.
Muskrat: No limit................... July 1-June 30
Grouse (Spruce and Ruffed): 15 per Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
day, 30 in possession.
Ptarmigan (Rock, Willow, and White- Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
tailed): 20 per day, 40 in
possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver:
Unit 23--the Kobuk and Selawik July 1-June 30.
River drainages--50 beaver.
Unit 23--remainder--30 beaver... July 1-June 30.
Coyote: No limit.................... Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Fox, Arctic (Blue and White Phase): Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
No limit.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black and Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Silver Phases): No limit.
Lynx: No limit...................... Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Marten: No limit.................... Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Mink and Weasel: No limit........... Nov. 1-Jan. 31.
Muskrat: No limit................... Nov. 1-June 10.
Otter: No limit..................... Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Wolf: No limit...................... Nov. 1-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: No limit................. Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(24) Unit 24. (i) Unit 24 consists of the Koyukuk River drainage
upstream from but not including the Dulbi River drainage:
(A) Unit 24A consists of the Middle Fork of the Koyukuk River
drainage upstream from but not including the Harriet Creek and North
Fork Koyukuk River drainages, to the South Fork of the Koyukuk River
drainage upstream from Squaw Creek, the Jim River Drainage, the Fish
Creek drainage upstream from and including the Bonanza Creek drainage,
to the 1,410' ft. peak of the hydrologic divide with the northern fork
of the Kanuti Chalatna River at N. Lat. 66[deg]33.303' W. Long.
151[deg]03.637' and following the unnamed northern fork of the Kanuti
Chalatna Creek to the confluence of the southern fork of the Kanuti
Chalatna River at N. Lat. 66[deg]27.090' W. Long. 151[deg]23.841', 4.2
miles SSW (194 degrees true) of Clawanmenka Lake and following the
unnamed southern fork of the Kanuti Chalatna Creek to the hydrologic
divide with the Kanuti River drainage at N. Lat. 66[deg]19.789' W.
Long. 151[deg]10.102', 3.0 miles ENE (79 degrees true) from the 2,055
ft. peak on that divide, and the Kanuti River drainage upstream from
the confluence of an unnamed creek at N. Lat. 66[deg]13.050' W. Long.
151[deg]05.864', 0.9 miles SSE (155 degrees true) of a 1,980 ft. peak
on that divide, and following that unnamed creek to the Unit 24
boundary on the hydrologic divide to the Ray River drainage at N. Lat.
66[deg]03.827' W. Long. 150[deg]49.988' at the 2,920 ft. peak of that
divide;
(B) Unit 24B consists of the Koyukuk River Drainage upstream from
Dog Island to the Subunit 24A boundary;
(C) Unit 24C consists of the Hogatza River Drainage, the Koyukuk
River Drainage upstream from Batza River on the north side of the
Koyukuk River and upstream from and including the Indian River Drainage
on the south side of the Koyukuk River to the Subunit 24B boundary;
(D) Unit 24D consists of the remainder of Unit 24.
(ii) In the following areas, the taking of wildlife for subsistence
uses is prohibited or restricted on public land:
(A) You may not use firearms, snowmobiles, licensed highway
vehicles, or motorized vehicles, except aircraft and boats, in the
Dalton Highway Corridor Management Area, which consists of those
portions of Units 20, 24, 25, and 26 extending 5 miles from each side
of the Dalton Highway from the Yukon River to milepost 300 of the
Dalton Highway, except as follows: Residents living within the Dalton
Highway Corridor Management Area may use
[[Page 73475]]
snowmobiles only for the subsistence taking of wildlife. You may use
licensed highway vehicles only on designated roads within the Dalton
Highway Corridor Management Area. The residents of Alatna, Allakaket,
Anaktuvuk Pass, Bettles, Evansville, and Stevens Village, and residents
living within the Corridor may use firearms within the Corridor only
for subsistence taking of wildlife;
(B) You may not use aircraft for hunting moose, including
transportation of any moose hunter or moose part in the Kanuti
Controlled Use Area, which consists of that portion of Unit 24 bounded
by a line from the Bettles Field VOR to the east side of Fish Creek
Lake, to Old Dummy Lake, to the south end of Lake Todatonten (including
all waters of these lakes), to the northernmost headwaters of Siruk
Creek, to the highest peak of Double Point Mountain, then back to the
Bettles Field VOR; however, this does not apply to transportation of a
moose hunter or moose part by aircraft between publicly owned airports
in the controlled use area or between a publicly owned airport within
the area and points outside the area;
(C) You may not use aircraft for hunting moose, including
transportation of any moose hunter or moose part in the Koyukuk
Controlled Use Area, which consists of those portions of Unit 21s and
24 bounded by a line from the north bank of the Yukon River at Koyukuk
at 64[deg]52.58' N. lat., 157[deg]43.10' W. long., then northerly to
the confluences of the Honhosa and Kateel Rivers at 65[deg]28.42' N.
lat., 157[deg]44.89' W. long., then northeasterly to the confluences of
Billy Hawk Creek and the Huslia River (65[deg]57' N. lat., 156[deg]41'
W. long.) at 65[deg]56.66' N. lat., 156[deg]40.81' W. long., then
easterly to the confluence of the forks of the Dakli River at
66[deg]02.56' N. lat., 156[deg]12.71' W. long., then easterly to the
confluence of McLanes Creek and the Hogatza River at 66[deg]00.31' N.
lat., 155[deg]18.57' W. long., then southwesterly to the crest of
Hochandochtla Mountain at 65[deg]31.87' N. lat., 154[deg]52.18' W.
long., then southwest to the mouth of Cottonwood Creek at 65[deg]13.00'
N. lat., 156[deg]06.43' W. long., then southwest to Bishop Rock
(Yistletaw) at 64[deg]49.35' N. lat., 157[deg]21.73' W. long., then
westerly along the north bank of the Yukon River (including Koyukuk
Island) to the point of beginning; however, this does not apply to
transportation of a moose hunter or moose part by aircraft between
publicly owned airports in the controlled use area or between a
publicly owned airport within the area and points outside the area; all
hunters on the Koyukuk River passing the ADF&G operated check station
at Ella's Cabin (15 miles upstream from the Yukon on the Koyukuk River)
are required to stop and report to ADF&G personnel at the check
station.
(iii) You may hunt brown bear by State registration permit in lieu
of a resident tag if you have obtained a State registration permit
prior to hunting. You may not use aircraft in any manner for brown bear
hunting under the authority of a brown bear State registration permit,
including transportation of hunters, bears, or parts of bears. However,
this prohibition does not apply to transportation of bear hunters or
bear parts by regularly scheduled flights to and between communities by
carriers that normally provide scheduled service to this area, nor does
it apply to transportation of aircraft to or between publicly owned
airports.
(iv) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) You may use bait to hunt black bear between April 15 and June
30; and in the Koyukuk Controlled Use Area, you may also use bait to
hunt black bear between September 1 and September 25;
(B) Arctic fox, incidentally taken with a trap or snare intended
for red fox, may be used for subsistence purposes.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear: 3 bears................. July 1-June 30.
Brown Bear: Unit 24--1 bear by State Aug. 10-June 30.
registration permit.
Caribou:
Unit 24--that portion south of Aug. 10-Mar. 31.
the south bank of the Kanuti
River, upstream from and
including that portion of the
Kanuti-Kilolitna River
drainage, bounded by the
southeast bank of the Kodosin-
Nolitna Creek, then downstream
along the east bank of the
Kanuti-Kilolitna River to its
confluence with the Kanuti
River--1 caribou.
Unit 24--remainder--5 caribou July 1-June 30.
per day; however, cow caribou
may not be taken May 16-June 30.
Sheep:
Unit 24A and 24B--(Anaktuvuk July 15-Dec. 31.
Pass residents only)--that
portion within the Gates of the
Arctic National Park--community
harvest quota of 60 sheep, no
more than 10 of which may be
ewes and a daily possession
limit of 3 sheep per person, no
more than 1 of which may be a
ewe.
Unit 24A and 24B--(excluding Aug. 1-Apr. 30.
Anaktuvuk Pass residents)--that
portion within the Gates of the
Arctic National Park--3 sheep.
Unit 24A--except that portion Aug. 20-Sept. 30.
within the Gates of the Arctic
National Park--1 ram with \7/8\
curl or larger horn by Federal
registration permit only.
Unit 24--remainder--1 ram with Aug. 10-Sept. 20.
\7/8\ curl or larger horn.
Moose:
Unit 24A-1 antlered bull by Aug. 25-Oct. 1.
Federal registration permit.
Unit 24B--that portion within Aug. 1-Dec. 31.
the John River Drainage--1
moose.
Unit 24B--all drainages to the Aug. 25-Oct. 1.
north of the Koyukuk River, Mar. 1-5 season to be announced.
except the John River drainage--
1 moose; however, antlerless
moose may be taken only during
the periods Sept. 27-Oct. 1 and
Mar. 1-5, if authorized jointly
by the Kanuti National Wildlife
Refuge Manager, the BLM Field
Office Manager, and Gates of
the Arctic National Park
Superintendent. A Federal
registration permit is required
for the Sept. 26-Oct. 1 and
Mar. 1-5 seasons. Harvest of
cows accompanied by calves is
prohibited. The announcement
will be made after consultation
with the ADF&G Area Biologist
and Chairs of the Western
Interior Alaska Subsistence
Regional Advisory Council, the
Gates of the Arctic Subsistence
Resource Commission, and the
Koyukuk River Fish and Game
Advisory Committee. Federal
public lands in the Kanuti
Controlled Use Area are closed
to taking of moose, except by
Federally qualified subsistence
users of Unit 24, Koyukuk, and
Galena hunting under these
regulations.
Unit 24B--remainder 1 antlered Aug. 25-Oct. 1.
bull. A Federal registration
permit is required for the
Sept. 26-Oct. 1 season. Federal
public lands in the Kanuti
Controlled Use Area are closed
to taking of moose, except by
Federally qualified subsistence
users of Unit 24, Koyukuk, and
Galena hunting under these
regulations.
[[Page 73476]]
Unit 24C and 24D--that portion Aug. 27-Sept. 20.
within the Koyukuk Controlled Mar. 1-5 to be announced.
Use Area and Koyukuk National
Wildlife Refuge--1 moose;
however, antlerless moose may
be taken only during Aug. 27-31
and the Mar. 1-5 season, if
authorized by announcement by
the Koyukuk/Nowitna National
Wildlife Refuge Manager and BLM
Field Office Manager Central
Yukon Field Office Manager.
Harvest of cow moose
accompanied by calves is
prohibited. During the Aug. 27-
Sept. 20 season, a State
registration permit is
required. During the Mar. 1-5
season, a Federal registration
permit is required.
Announcement for the antlerless
moose seasons and cow quotas
will be made after consultation
with the ADF&G Area Biologist
and the Chairs of the Western
Interior Alaska Subsistence
Regional Advisory Council, and
the Middle Yukon and Koyukuk
River Fish and Game Advisory
Committees.
Unit 24C--remainder and Unit Aug. 25-Oct. 1.
24D--remainder--1 antlered
bull. During the Sept. 5--Sept.
25 season, a State registration
permit is required.
Coyote: 10 coyotes.................. Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black and Sept. 1-Mar. 15.
Silver Phases): 10 foxes; however,
no more than 2 foxes may be taken
prior to Oct. 1.
Hare (Snowshoe): No limit........... July 1-June 30.
Lynx: 2 lynx........................ Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Wolf: 15 wolves; however, no more Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
than 5 wolves may be taken prior to
Nov. 1.
Wolverine: 5 wolverine; however, no Sept. 1-Mar. 31.
more than 1 wolverine may be taken
prior to Nov. 1.
Grouse (Spruce, Ruffed, and Sharp- Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
tailed): 15 per day, 30 in
possession.
Ptarmigan (Rock and Willow): 20 per Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
day, 40 in possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver: No limit.................... Nov. 1-June 10.
Coyote: No limit.................... Nov. 1-Mar. 31.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black and Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Silver Phases): No limit.
Lynx: No limit...................... Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Marten: No limit.................... Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Mink and Weasel: No limit........... Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Muskrat: No limit................... Nov. 1-June 10.
Otter: No limit..................... Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Wolf: No limit...................... Nov. 1-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: No limit................. Nov. 1-Mar. 31.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(25) Unit 25. (i) Unit 25 consists of the Yukon River drainage
upstream from but not including the Hamlin Creek drainage, and
excluding drainages into the south bank of the Yukon River upstream
from the Charley River:
(A) Unit 25A consists of the Hodzana River drainage upstream from
the Narrows, the Chandalar River drainage upstream from and including
the East Fork drainage, the Christian River drainage upstream from
Christian, the Sheenjek River drainage upstream from and including the
Thluichohnjik Creek, the Coleen River drainage, and the Old Crow River
drainage;
(B) Unit 25B consists of the Little Black River drainage upstream
from but not including the Big Creek drainage, the Black River drainage
upstream from and including the Salmon Fork drainage, the Porcupine
River drainage upstream from the confluence of the Coleen and Porcupine
Rivers, and drainages into the north bank of the Yukon River upstream
from Circle, including the islands in the Yukon River;
(C) Unit 25C consists of drainages into the south bank of the Yukon
River upstream from Circle to the Subunit 20E boundary, the Birch Creek
drainage upstream from the Steese Highway bridge (milepost 147), the
Preacher Creek drainage upstream from and including the Rock Creek
drainage, and the Beaver Creek drainage upstream from and including the
Moose Creek drainage;
(D) Unit 25D consists of the remainder of Unit 25.
(ii) In the following areas, the taking of wildlife for subsistence
uses is prohibited or restricted on public land:
(A) You may not use firearms, snowmobiles, licensed highway
vehicles or motorized vehicles, except aircraft and boats in the Dalton
Highway Corridor Management Area, which consists of those portions of
Units 20, 24, 25, and 26 extending 5 miles from each side of the Dalton
Highway from the Yukon River to milepost 300 of the Dalton Highway,
except as follows: Residents living within the Dalton Highway Corridor
Management Area may use snowmobiles only for the subsistence taking of
wildlife. You may use licensed highway vehicles only on designated
roads within the Dalton Highway Corridor Management Area. The residents
of Alatna, Allakaket, Anaktuvuk Pass, Bettles, Evansville, Stevens
Village, and residents living within the Corridor may use firearms
within the Corridor only for subsistence taking of wildlife;
(B) The Arctic Village Sheep Management Area consists of that
portion of Unit 25A north and west of Arctic Village, which is bounded
on the east by the East Fork Chandalar River beginning at the
confluence of Red Sheep Creek and proceeding southwesterly downstream
past Arctic Village to the confluence with Crow Nest Creek, continuing
up Crow Nest Creek, through Portage Lake, to its confluence with the
Junjik River; then down the Junjik River past Timber Lake and a larger
tributary, to a major, unnamed tributary, northwesterly, for
approximately 6 miles where the stream forks into 2 roughly equal
drainages; the boundary follows the easternmost fork, proceeding almost
due north to the headwaters and intersects the Continental Divide; the
boundary then follows the Continental Divide easterly, through Carter
Pass, then easterly and northeasterly approximately 62 miles along the
divide to the head waters of the most northerly tributary of Red Sheep
Creek then follows southerly along the divide designating the eastern
extreme of the Red Sheep Creek drainage then to the confluence of Red
Sheep Creek and the East Fork Chandalar River.
(iii) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) You may use bait to hunt black bear between April 15 and June
30 and between August 1 and September 25; you may use bait to hunt
wolves on FWS and BLM lands;
[[Page 73477]]
(B) You may take caribou and moose from a boat moving under power
in Unit 25;
(C) The taking of bull moose outside the seasons provided in this
part for food in memorial potlatches and traditional cultural events is
authorized in Unit 25D west provided that:
(1) The person organizing the religious ceremony or cultural event
contact the Refuge Manager, Yukon Flats National Wildlife Refuge prior
to taking or attempting to take bull moose and provide to the Refuge
Manager the name of the decedent, the nature of the ceremony or
cultural event, number to be taken, the general area in which the
taking will occur;
(2) Each person who takes a bull moose under this section must
submit a written report to the Refuge Manager, Yukon Flats National
Wildlife Refuge not more than 15 days after the harvest specifying the
harvester's name and address, and the date(s) and location(s) of the
taking(s);
(3) No permit or harvest ticket is required for taking under this
section; however, the harvester must be an Alaska rural resident with
customary and traditional use in Unit 25D west;
(4) Any moose taken under this provision counts against the annual
quota of 60 bulls.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear:
3 bears......................... July 1-June 30.
or 3 bears by State community July 1-June 30.
harvest permit.
Brown Bear:
Unit 25A and 25B--1 bear........ Aug. 10-June 30.
Unit 25C--1 bear................ Sept. 1-May 31.
Unit 25D--1 bear................ July 1-June 30.
Caribou:
Unit 25C--that portion west of Aug. 10-Sept. 20.
the east bank of the mainstem Nov. 1-Mar. 31.
of Preacher Creek to its
confluence with American Creek,
then west of the east bank of
American Creek--1 caribou;
however, cow caribou may be
taken only from Nov. 1-Mar. 31.
However, during the November 1-
March 31 season, a State
registration permit is required.
Unit 25C--remainder--1 caribou Aug. 10-Sept. 30.
by joint State/Federal Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
registration permit only. Up to
600 caribou may be taken under
a State/Federal harvest quota.
The season closures will be
announced by the Eastern
Interior Field Office Manager,
Bureau of Land Management,
after consultation with the
National Park Service and
Alaska Department of Fish and
Game.
Unit 25D--that portion of Unit Aug. 10-Sept. 30.
25D drained by the west fork of Dec. 1-31.
the Dall River west of 150[deg]
W. long.--1 bull.
Unit 25A, 25B, and Unit 25D-- July 1-Apr. 30.
remainder--10 caribou.
Sheep:
Unit 25A--that portion within No open season
the Dalton Highway Corridor
Management Area.
Units 25A--Arctic Village Sheep Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Management Area--2 rams by
Federal registration permit
only. Federal public lands,
except the drainages of Red
Sheep Creek and Cane Creek
during the period of Aug. 10-
Sept. 20, are closed to the
taking of sheep except by rural
Alaska residents of Arctic
Village, Venetie, Fort Yukon,
Kaktovik, and Chalkyitsik
hunting under these regulations.
Unit 25A--remainder--3 sheep by Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Federal registration permit
only.
Moose:
Unit 25A--1 antlered bull....... Aug. 25-Sept. 25.
Dec. 1-10.
Unit 25B--that portion within Aug. 20-Sept. 30.
Yukon-Charley National
Preserve--1 bull.
Unit 25B--that portion within Aug. 25-Sept. 30.
the Porcupine River drainage Dec. 1-10.
upstream from, but excluding
the Coleen River drainage--1
antlered bull.
Unit 25B--that portion, other Sept. 5-30.
than Yukon-Charley National Dec. 1-15.
Preserve, draining into the
north bank of the Yukon River
upstream from and including the
Kandik River drainage,
including the islands in the
Yukon River--1 antlered bull.
Unit 25B--remainder--1 antlered Aug. 25-Sept. 25.
bull. Dec. 1-15.
Unit 25C--1 antlered bull....... Sept. 1-15.
Unit 25D (west)--that portion Aug. 25-Feb. 28.
lying west of a line extending
from the Unit 25D boundary on
Preacher Creek, then downstream
along Preacher Creek, Birch
Creek and Lower Mouth of Birch
Creek to the Yukon River, then
downstream along the north bank
of the Yukon River (including
islands) to the confluence of
the Hadweenzic River, then
upstream along the west bank of
the Hadweenzic River to the
confluence of Forty and One-
Half Mile Creek, then upstream
along Forty and One-Half Mile
Creek to Nelson Mountain on the
Unit 25D boundary--1 bull by a
Federal registration permit.
Permits will be available in
the following villages: Beaver
(25 permits), Birch Creek (10
permits), and Stevens Village
(25 permits). Permits for
residents of 25D (west) who do
not live in one of the three
villages will be available by
contacting the Yukon Flats
National Wildlife Refuge Office
in Fairbanks or a local Refuge
Information Technician. Moose
hunting on public land in Unit
25D (west) is closed at all
times except for residents of
Unit 25D (west) hunting under
these regulations. The moose
season will be closed by
announcement of the Refuge
Manager Yukon Flats NWR when 60
moose have been harvested in
the entirety (from Federal and
non-Federal lands) of Unit 25D
(west).
Unit 25D--remainder--1 antlered Aug. 25-Sept. 25.
moose. Dec. 1-20.
Beaver:
Unit 25A, 25B, and 25D--1 beaver Apr. 16-Oct. 31.
per day; 1 in possession.
Unit 25C........................ No open season.
Coyote: 10 coyotes.................. Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black and Sept. 1-Mar. 15.
Silver Phases): 10 foxes; however,
no more than 2 foxes may be taken
prior to Oct. 1.
Hare (Snowshoe): No limit........... July 1-June 30.
[[Page 73478]]
Lynx:
Unit 25C--2 lynx................ Dec. 1-Jan. 31.
Unit 25--remainder--2 lynx...... Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Muskrat:
Unit 25B and 25C, that portion Nov. 1-June 10.
within Yukon-Charley Rivers
National Preserve--No limit.
Unit 25--remainder.............. No open season.
Wolf:
Unit 25A--No limit.............. Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Unit 25--remainder--10 wolves... Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: 1 wolverine.............. Sept. 1-Mar. 31.
Grouse (Spruce, Ruffed, and Sharp-
tailed):
Unit 25C--15 per day, 30 in Aug. 10-Mar. 31.
possession.
Unit 25--remainder--15 per day, Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
30 in possession.
Ptarmigan (Rock and Willow):
Unit 25C--those portions within Aug. 10-Mar. 31.
5 miles of Route 6 (Steese
Highway)--20 per day, 40 in
possession.
Unit 25--remainder--20 per day, Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
40 in possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beaver:
Unit 25C--No limit.............. Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Unit 25--remainder--50 beaver... Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Coyote: No limit.................... Nov. 1-Mar. 31.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black and Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Silver Phases): No limit.
Lynx: No limit...................... Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Marten: No limit.................... Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Mink and Weasel: No limit........... Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Muskrat: No limit................... Nov. 1-June 10.
Otter: No limit..................... Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Wolf: No limit...................... Nov. 1-Apr. 30.
Wolverine:
Unit 25C--No limit.............. Nov. 1-Feb. 28.
Unit 25--remainder--No limit.... Nov. 1-Mar. 31.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(26) Unit 26. (i) Unit 26 consists of Arctic Ocean drainages
between Cape Lisburne and the Alaska-Canada border, including the Firth
River drainage within Alaska:
(A) Unit 26A consists of that portion of Unit 26 lying west of the
Itkillik River drainage and west of the east bank of the Colville River
between the mouth of the Itkillik River and the Arctic Ocean;
(B) Unit 26B consists of that portion of Unit 26 east of Unit 26A,
west of the west bank of the Canning River and west of the west bank of
the Marsh Fork of the Canning River;
(C) Unit 26C consists of the remainder of Unit 26.
(ii) In the following areas, the taking of wildlife for subsistence
uses is prohibited or restricted on public land:
(A) You may not use aircraft in any manner for moose hunting,
including transportation of moose hunters or parts of moose during the
periods July 1-Sept. 14 and Jan. 1-Mar. 31 in Unit 26A; however, this
does not apply to transportation of moose hunters, their gear, or moose
parts by aircraft between publicly owned airports;
(B) You may not use firearms, snowmobiles, licensed highway
vehicles or motorized vehicles, except aircraft and boats, in the
Dalton Highway Corridor Management Area, which consists of those
portions of Units 20, 24, 25, and 26 extending 5 miles from each side
of the Dalton Highway from the Yukon River to milepost 300 of the
Dalton Highway, except as follows: Residents living within the Dalton
Highway Corridor Management Area may use snowmobiles only for the
subsistence taking of wildlife. You may use licensed highway vehicles
only on designated roads within the Dalton Highway Corridor Management
Area. The residents of Alatna, Allakaket, Anaktuvuk Pass, Bettles,
Evansville, Stevens Village, and residents living within the Corridor
may use firearms within the Corridor only for subsistence taking of
wildlife.
(iii) You may hunt brown bear in Unit 26A by State registration
permit in lieu of a resident tag if you have obtained a State
registration permit prior to hunting. You may not use aircraft in any
manner for brown bear hunting under the authority of a brown bear State
registration permit, including transportation of hunters, bears or
parts of bears. However, this does not apply to transportation of bear
hunters or bear parts by regularly scheduled flights to and between
communities by carriers that normally provide scheduled service to this
area, nor does it apply to transportation of aircraft to or between
publicly owned airports.
(iv) Unit-specific regulations:
(A) You may take caribou from a boat moving under power in Unit 26;
(B) In addition to other restrictions on method of take found in
this Sec. ----.26, you may also take swimming caribou with a firearm
using rimfire cartridges;
(C) In Kaktovik, a Federally qualified subsistence user (recipient)
may designate another Federally qualified subsistence user to take
sheep or musk ox on his or her behalf unless the recipient is a member
of a community operating under a community harvest system. The
designated hunter must obtain a designated hunter permit and must
return a completed harvest report. The designated hunter may hunt for
any number of recipients but may have no more than two harvest limits
in his/her possession at any one time;
(D) For the DeLong Mountain sheep hunts--A Federally qualified
subsistence user (recipient) may designate another Federally qualified
subsistence user to take sheep on his or her behalf unless the
recipient is a member of a community operating under a community
harvest system. The designated hunter must obtain a designated hunter
permit and must return a completed harvest report. The designated
hunter may hunt for only one recipient in the course of a season and
may have both his and the recipient's harvest limits in his/her
possession at the same time.
[[Page 73479]]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Harvest limits Open season
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hunting
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Black Bear: 3 bears................. July 1-June 30.
Brown Bear:
Unit 26A--1 bear by State July 1-May 31.
registration permit.
Unit 26B--1 bear................ Sept. 1-May 31.
Unit 26 C--1 bear............... Aug. 10-June 30.
Caribou:
Unit 26A--10 caribou per day; July 1-June 30.
however, cow caribou may not be
taken May 16-June 30.
Unit 26B--10 caribou per day; July 1-June 30.
however, cow caribou may be
taken only from Oct. 1-Apr. 30.
Unit 26C--10 caribou per day.... July 1-Apr. 30.
(You may not transport more than 5
caribou per regulatory year from
Unit 26 except to the community of
Anaktuvuk Pass.).
Sheep:
Unit 26A and 26B--(Anaktuvuk July 15-Dec. 31.
Pass residents only)--that
portion within the Gates of the
Arctic National Park--community
harvest quota of 60 sheep, no
more than 10 of which may be
ewes and a daily possession
limit of 3 sheep per person, no
more than 1 of which may be a
ewe.
Unit 26A--(excluding Anaktuvuk Aug. 1-Apr. 30.
Pass residents)--those portions
within the Gates of the Arctic
National Park--3 sheep.
Unit 26A--that portion west of Aug. 10-April 30. If the allowable
Howard Pass and the Etivluk harvest levels are reached before
River (DeLong Mountains)--1 the regular season closing date,
sheep by Federal registration the Superintendent of the Western
permit. The total allowable Arctic National Parklands will
harvest of sheep for the DeLong announce an early closure.
Mountains is 8, of which 5 may
be rams and 3 may be ewes.
Unit 26B--that portion within Aug. 10-Sept. 20.
the Dalton Highway Corridor
Management Area--1 ram with \7/
8\ curl or larger horn by
Federal registration permit
only.
Unit 26A--remainder and 26B-- Aug. 10-Sept. 20.
remainder--including the Gates
of the Arctic National
Preserve--1 ram with \7/8\ curl
or larger horn.
Unit 26C--3 sheep per regulatory Aug. 10-Sept. 20.
year; the Aug. 10-Sept. 20 Oct. 1-Apr. 30.
season is restricted to 1 ram
with \7/8\ curl or larger horn.
A Federal registration permit
is required for the Oct. 1-Apr.
30 season.
Moose:
Unit 26A--that portion of the Aug. 1-Sept. 14.
Colville River drainage
upstream from and including the
Anaktuvuk River drainage--1
bull.
Unit 26A--that portion of the Feb. 15-Apr. 15.
Colville River drainage
upstream from and including the
Anaktuvuk River drainage--1
moose; however, you may not
take a calf or a cow
accompanied by a calf.
Unit 26A--that portion west of July 1-Sept. 14.
156[deg] 00'W. longitude
excluding the Colville River
drainage--1 moose, however, you
may not take a calf or a cow
accompanied by a calf.
Unit 26A--remainder--1 bull..... Aug. 1-Sept. 14.
Unit 26B, excluding the Canning Sept. 1-14.
River drainage--1 bull.
Units 26B remainder and 26C--1 July 1-Mar. 31.
moose by Federal registration
permit by residents of Kaktovik
only. The harvest quota is 3
moose (2 bulls and 1 of either
sex), provided that no more
than 2 bulls may be harvested
from Unit 26C and cows may not
be harvested from Unit 26C. You
may not take a cow accompanied
by a calf. Only 3 Federal
registration permits will be
issued. Federal public lands
are closed to the taking of
moose except by a Kaktovik
resident holding a Federal
registration permit and hunting
under these regulations.
Musk ox: Unit 26C--1 bull by Federal July 15-Mar. 31.
registration permit only. The
number of permits that may be
issued only to the residents of the
village of Kaktovik will not exceed
three percent (3%) of the number of
musk oxen counted in Unit 26C
during a pre-calving census. Public
lands are closed to the taking of
musk ox, except by rural Alaska
residents of the village of
Kaktovik hunting under these
regulations
Coyote: 2 coyotes................... Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
Fox, Arctic (Blue and White Phase): Sept. 1-Apr. 30.
2 foxes.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black and
Silver Phases):.
Unit 26A and 26B--10 foxes; Sept. 1-Mar. 15.
however, no more than 2 foxes
may be taken prior to Oct. 1.
Unit 26C--10 foxes.............. Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Hare (Snowshoe and Tundra): No limit July 1-June 30.
Lynx: 2 lynx........................ Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Wolf: 15 wolves..................... Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: 5 wolverine.............. Sept. 1-Mar. 31.
Ptarmigan (Rock and Willow): 20 per Aug. 10-Apr. 30.
day, 40 in possession.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Trapping
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Coyote: No limit.................... Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Fox, Arctic (Blue and White Phase): Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
No limit.
Fox, Red (including Cross, Black and Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Silver Phases): No limit.
Lynx: No limit...................... Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Marten: No limit.................... Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Mink and Weasel: No limit........... Nov. 1-Jan. 31.
Muskrat: No limit................... Nov. 1-June 10.
[[Page 73480]]
Otter: No limit..................... Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
Wolf: No limit...................... Nov. 1-Apr. 30.
Wolverine: No limit................. Nov. 1-Apr. 15.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
0
5. In subpart D of 36 CFR part 242 and 50 CFR part 100, Sec. Sec. --
--.27(i)(10) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. ----.27 Subsistence taking of fish.
* * * * *
(i) * * *
(10) Cook Inlet Area. The Cook Inlet Area includes all waters of
Alaska enclosed by a line extending east from Cape Douglas
(58[deg]51.10' N. Lat.) and a line extending south from Cape Fairfield
(148[deg]50.25' W. Long.).
(i) Unless restricted in this section, or unless restricted under
the terms of a subsistence fishing permit, you may take fish at any
time in the Cook Inlet Area. If you take rainbow/steelhead trout
incidentally in subsistence net fisheries, you may retain them for
subsistence purposes, unless otherwise prohibited or provided for in
this section. With jigging gear through the ice or rod and reel gear in
open waters there is an annual limit of 2 rainbow/steelhead trout 20
inches or longer, taken from Kenai Peninsula freshwaters.
(ii) You may take fish by gear listed in this part unless
restricted in this section or under the terms of a subsistence fishing
permit (as may be modified by this section).
(iii) You may not take grayling or burbot for subsistence purposes.
(iv) You may only take salmon, trout, Dolly Varden, and other char
under authority of a Federal subsistence fishing permit. Seasons,
harvest and possession limits, and methods and means for take are the
same as for the taking of those species under Alaska sport fishing
regulations (5 AAC 56) unless modified herein. Additionally for
Federally managed waters of the Kasilof and Kenai River drainages:
(A) Residents of Ninilchik may take sockeye, Chinook, coho, and
pink salmon through a dip net and a rod and reel fishery on the upper
mainstem of the Kasilof River from Federal regulatory markers on both
sides of the river below the outlet of Tustumena Lake downstream to
markers on both sides of the river at Silver Salmon Rapids. Residents
using rod and reel gear may fish with up to 2 baited single or treble
hooks. Other species incidentally caught during the dip net and rod and
reel fishery may be retained for subsistence uses, including up to 200
rainbow/steelhead trout taken through August 15. After 200 rainbow/
steelhead trout have been taken in this fishery or after August 15, all
rainbow/steelhead trout must be released unless otherwise provided for
in this section. Before leaving the fishing site, all retained fish
must be recorded on the permit and marked by removing the dorsal fin.
Harvests must be reported within 72 hours to the Federal fisheries
manager upon leaving the fishing location.
(1) Fishing for sockeye and Chinook salmon will be allowed from
June 16-August 15.
(2) Fishing for coho and pink salmon will be allowed from June 16-
October 31.
(3) Fishing for sockeye, Chinook, coho, or pink salmon will end
prior to regulatory end dates if the annual total harvest limit for
that species is reached or superseded by Federal special action.
(4) Each household may harvest their annual sockeye, Chinook, coho,
or pink salmon limits in one or more days, and each household member
may fish with a dip net or a rod and reel during this time. Salmon
taken in the Kenai River system dip net and rod and reel fishery will
be included as part of each household's annual limit for the Kasilof
River.
(i) For sockeye salmon--annual total harvest limit of 4,000; annual
household limits of 25 for each permit holder and 5 additional for each
household member;
(ii) For Chinook salmon--annual harvest limit of 500; annual
household limit of 10 for each permit holder and 2 additional for each
household member;
(iii) For coho salmon--annual total harvest limit of 500; annual
household limits of 10 for each permit holder and 2 additional for each
household member; and
(iv) For pink salmon--annual total harvest limit of 500; annual
household limits of 10 for each permit holder and 2 additional for each
household member.
(B) In addition to the dip net and rod and reel fishery on the
upper mainstem of the Kasilof River described under paragraph
(i)(10)(iv)(A) of this section, residents of Ninilchik may also take
coho and pink salmon through a rod and reel fishery in Tustumena Lake.
Before leaving the fishing site, all retained salmon must be recorded
on the permit and marked by removing the dorsal fin. Seasons, areas,
harvest and possession limits, and methods and means for take are the
same as for the taking of these species under Alaska sport fishing
regulations (5 AAC 56), except for the following methods and means, and
bag and possession limits:
(1) Fishing will be allowed with up to 2 baited single or treble
hooks.
(2) For coho salmon 16 inches and longer, the daily bag and
possession limits are 4 per day and 4 in possession.
(3) For pink salmon 16 inches and longer, daily bag and possession
limits are 6 per day and 6 in possession.
(C) Resident fish species including lake trout, rainbow/steelhead
trout, and Dolly Varden/Arctic char may be harvested in Federally
managed waters of the Kasilof River drainage. Resident fish species
harvested in the Kasilof River drainage under the conditions of a
Federal subsistence permit must be marked by removing the dorsal fin
immediately after harvest and recorded on the permit prior to leaving
the fishing site.
(1) Lake trout may be harvested with rod and reel gear the entire
year. For fish 20 inches or longer, daily bag and possession limits are
4 per day and 4 in possession. For fish less than 20 inches, daily bag
and possession limits are 15 per day and 15 in possession.
(2) Dolly Varden/Arctic char may be harvested with rod and reel
gear the entire year. In flowing waters, daily bag and possession
limits are 4 per day and 4 in possession. In lakes and ponds, daily bag
and possession limits are 10 fish per day and 10 in possession.
(3) Rainbow trout may be harvested with rod and reel gear the
entire year for fish less than 20 inches in length. In flowing waters,
daily bag and possession limits are 2 per day and 2 in possession. In
lakes and ponds, daily bag and possession limits are 5 per day and 5 in
possession.
(4) You may fish in Tustumena Lake with a gillnet, no longer than
10 fathoms, fished under the ice or jigging gear used through the ice
under authority of a Federal subsistence fishing permit. The total
annual harvest quota for this fishery is 200 lake trout, 200 rainbow
trout, and 500 Dolly Varden/Arctic char. The use of a gillnet will be
prohibited by special action after the harvest quota of any species has
been met. For the jig fishery, annual household limits are 30 fish in
any
[[Page 73481]]
combination of lake trout, rainbow trout or Dolly Varden/Arctic char.
(i) You may harvest fish under the ice only in Tustumena Lake.
Gillnets are not allowed within a \1/4\ mile radius of the mouth of any
tributary to Tustumena Lake, or the outlet of Tustumena Lake.
(ii) Permits will be issued by the Federal fisheries manager or
designated representative, and will be valid for the winter season,
unless the season is closed by special action.
(iii) All harvests must be reported within 72 hours to the Federal
fisheries manager upon leaving the fishing location. Reported
information must include number of each species caught; number of each
species retained; length, depth (number of meshes deep) and mesh size
of gillnet fished; location fished; and total hours fished. Harvest
data on the permit must be filled out before transporting fish from the
fishing area.
(iv) The gillnet must be checked at least once in every 48-hour
period.
(v) For unattended gear, the permittee's name and address must be
plainly and legibly inscribed on a stake at one end of the gillnet.
(vi) Incidentally caught fish may be retained and must be recorded
on the permit.
(vii) Failure to return the completed harvest permit by May 31 may
result in issuance of a violation notice and/or denial of a future
subsistence permit.
(D) Residents of Hope, Cooper Landing, and Ninilchik may take
sockeye salmon through a dip net and a rod and reel fishery at one
specified site on the Russian River, and sockeye, late-run Chinook,
coho, and pink salmon through a dip net/rod and reel fishery at two
specified sites on the Kenai River below Skilak Lake and as provided in
this section. For Ninilchik residents, salmon taken in the Kasilof
River Federal subsistence dip net and a rod and reel fishery will be
included as part of each household's annual limit for the Kenai and
Russian Rivers' dip net and rod and reel fishery. For both Kenai River
fishing sites below Skilak Lake, incidentally caught fish may be
retained for subsistence uses, except for early-run Chinook salmon
(unless otherwise provided for), rainbow trout 18 inches or longer, and
Dolly Varden 18 inches or longer, which must be released. For the
Russian River fishing site, incidentally caught fish may be retained
for subsistence uses, except for early- and late-run Chinook salmon,
coho salmon, rainbow trout, and Dolly Varden, which must be released.
Before leaving the fishing site, all retained fish must be recorded on
the permit and marked by removing the dorsal fin. Harvests must be
reported within 72 hours to the Federal fisheries manager upon leaving
the fishing site, and permits must be returned to the manager at the
end of the season. Chum salmon that are retained are to be included
within the annual limit for sockeye salmon. Only residents of Hope and
Cooper Landing may retain incidentally caught resident species.
(1) The household dip net and rod and reel gear fishery is limited
to three sites:
(i) At the Kenai River Moose Meadows site, dip netting and rod and
reel gear are allowed only from a boat from Federal regulatory markers
on both banks of the Kenai River at about river mile 29 downstream
approximately 2.5 miles to markers on both banks of the Kenai River at
about river mile 26.5. Residents using rod and reel gear at this
fishery site may fish with up to 2 baited single or treble hooks from
June 16-August 31.
(ii) At the Kenai River Mile 48 site, dip netting is allowed while
either standing in the river or from a boat, from Federal regulatory
markers on both banks of the Kenai River at about river mile 48
(approximately 2 miles below the outlet of Skilak Lake) downstream
approximately 2.5 miles to markers on both banks of the Kenai River at
about river mile 45.5. Residents using rod and reel gear at this
fishery site may fish with up to 2 baited single or treble hooks from
June 16-August 31.
(iii) At the Russian River Falls site, dip netting is allowed from
a Federal regulatory marker near the upstream end of the fish ladder at
Russian River Falls downstream to a Federal regulatory marker
approximately 600 yards below Russian River Falls. Residents using rod
and reel gear at this fishery site may not fish with bait at any time.
(2) Fishing seasons are as follows:
(i) For sockeye salmon at all fishery sites: June 15-August 15;
(ii) For late-run Chinook, pink, and coho salmon at both Kenai
River fishery sites only: July 16-September 30; and
(iii) Fishing for sockeye, late-run Chinook, coho, or pink salmon
will close by special action prior to regulatory end dates if the
annual total harvest limit for that species is reached or superseded by
Federal special action.
(3) Each household may harvest their annual sockeye, late-run
Chinook, coho, or pink salmon limits in one or more days, and each
household member may fish with a dip net or rod and reel during this
time. Salmon taken in the Kenai River system dip net and rod and reel
fishery by Ninilchik households will be included as part of those
households' annual limits for the Kasilof River.
(i) For sockeye salmon--annual total harvest limit of 4,000
(including any retained chum salmon); annual household limits of 25 for
each permit holder and 5 additional for each household member;
(ii) For late-run Chinook salmon--annual total harvest limit of
1,000; annual household limits of 10 for each permit holder and 2
additional for each household member;
(iii) For coho salmon--annual total harvest limit of 3,000; annual
household limits of 20 for each permit holder and 5 additional for each
household member; and
(iv) For pink salmon--annual total harvest limit of 2,000; annual
household limits of 15 for each permit holder and 5 additional for each
household member.
(E) For Federally managed waters of the Kenai River and its
tributaries, in addition to the dip net and rod and reel fisheries on
the Kenai and Russian rivers described under paragraph (i)(10)(iv)(D)
of this section, residents of Hope, Cooper Landing, and Ninilchik may
take sockeye, Chinook, coho, pink, and chum salmon through a separate
rod and reel fishery in the Kenai River drainage. Before leaving the
fishing site, all retained fish must be recorded on the permit and
marked by removing the dorsal fin. Permits must be returned to the
Federal fisheries manager at the end of the fishing season.
Incidentally caught fish, other than salmon, are subject to regulations
found in paragraphs (i)(10)(iv)(F) and (G) of this section. Seasons,
areas (including seasonal riverbank closures), harvest and possession
limits, and methods and means for take are the same as for the taking
of these salmon species under State of Alaska fishing regulations (5
AAC 56), except for the following bag and possession limits:
(1) In the Kenai River below Skilak Lake, fishing is allowed with
up to 2 baited single or treble hooks from June 16-August 31.
(2) For early-run Chinook salmon less than 44 inches or 55 inches
or longer, daily bag and possession limits are 2 per day and 2 in
possession.
(3) For late-run Chinook salmon 20 inches and longer, daily bag and
possession limits are 2 per day and 2 in possession.
(4) Annual harvest limits for any combination of early- and late-
run Chinook salmon are 4 for each permit holder.
(5) For other salmon 16 inches and longer, the combined daily bag
and
[[Page 73482]]
possession limits are 6 per day and 6 in possession, of which no more
than 4 per day and 4 in possession may be coho salmon, except for the
Sanctuary Area and Russian River, for which no more than 2 per day and
2 in possession may be coho salmon.
(F) For Federally managed waters of the Kenai River and its
tributaries below Skilak Lake outlet at river mile 50, residents of
Hope and Cooper Landing may take resident fish species including lake
trout, rainbow trout, and Dolly Varden/Arctic char with jigging gear
through the ice or rod and reel gear in open waters. Resident fish
species harvested in the Kenai River drainage under the conditions of a
Federal subsistence permit must be marked by removal of the dorsal fin
immediately after harvest and recorded on the permit prior to leaving
the fishing site. Seasons, areas (including seasonal riverbank
closures), harvest and possession limits, and methods and means for
take are the same as for the taking of these resident species under
State of Alaska fishing regulations (5 AAC 56), except for the
following bag and possession limits:
(1) For lake trout 20 inches or longer, daily bag and possession
limits are 4 per day and 4 in possession. For fish less than 20 inches,
daily bag and possession limits are 15 per day and 15 in possession.
(2) In flowing waters, daily bag and possession limits for Dolly
Varden/Arctic char less than 18 inches in length are 1 per day and 1 in
possession. In lakes and ponds, daily bag and possession limits are 2
per day and 2 in possession. Only 1 of these fish can be 20 inches or
longer.
(3) In flowing waters, daily bag and possession limits for rainbow/
steelhead trout are 1 per day and 1 in possession and must be less than
18 inches in length. In lakes and ponds, daily bag and possession
limits are 2 per day and 2 in possession of which only 1 fish 20 inches
or longer may be harvested daily.
(G) For Federally managed waters of the upper Kenai River and its
tributaries above Skilak Lake outlet at river mile 50, residents of
Hope and Cooper Landing may take resident fish species including lake
trout, rainbow trout, and Dolly Varden/Arctic char with jigging gear
through the ice or rod and reel gear in open waters. Resident fish
species harvested in the Kenai River drainage under the conditions of a
Federal subsistence permit must be marked by removal of the dorsal fin
immediately after harvest and recorded on the permit prior to leaving
the fishing site. Seasons, areas (including seasonal riverbank
closures), harvest and possession limits, and methods and means for
take are the same as for the taking of these resident species under
Alaska fishing regulations (5 AAC 56), except for the following bag and
possession limits:
(1) For lake trout 20 inches or longer, daily bag and possession
limits are 4 per day and 4 in possession. For fish less than 20 inches,
daily bag and possession limits are 15 fish per day and 15 in
possession. For Hidden Lake, daily limits are 4 per day and 4 in
possession regardless of size.
(2) In flowing waters, daily bag and possession limits for Dolly
Varden/Arctic char less than 16 inches are 1 per day and 1 in
possession. In lakes and ponds, daily bag and possession limits are 2
per day and 2 in possession of which only 1 fish 20 inches or longer
may be harvested daily.
(3) In flowing waters, daily bag and possession limits for rainbow/
steelhead trout are 1 per day and 1 in possession and it must be less
than 16 inches in length. In lakes and ponds, daily bag and possession
limits are 2 per day and 2 in possession of which only 1 fish 20 inches
or longer may be harvested daily.
(v) You may only take smelt with dip nets in fresh water from April
1-June 15. There are no harvest or possession limits for smelt.
(vi) Gillnets may not be used in fresh water, except for the taking
of whitefish in the Tyone River drainage and as otherwise provided for
in this Cook Inlet section.
* * * * *
Dated: November 20, 2007.
Peter J. Probasco,
Acting Chair, Federal Subsistence Board.
Steve Kessler,
Subsistence Program Leader, USDA--Forest Service.
[FR Doc. E7-24571 Filed 12-26-07; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410-11-P