Preserve Caribou Habitat in Alaska

  • by: Animal Advocates
  • recipient: President Barack Obama, U.S. Department of the Interior's Bureau of Land Management, U.S Fish and Wildlife Service Alaska

Four existing areas of western Arctic Alaska within the National Petroluem Reserve lack permanent protection as the U.S. Department of the Interior's Bureau of Land Management is deciding what to do with 23 million acres of public land where caribou and other wildlife live.

 

These four regions need protection because of the exceptional biodiversity among marine mammals including polar bears, walruses, beluga whales, and seals. The area is also important for two large caribou herds and vital for community subsistence among northern and western Alaskan communities, as well as grizzly bears, wolves, wolverines, and arctic foxes. The wetlands  provide vital nesting, feeding, and staging habitats for migratory bird populations, including many that disperse to all lower 48 states.

 

The BLM could choose to preserve the caribou's habitat. Don't let oil and gas development destroy it.

 

President Barack Obama

The White House

1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW

Washington, DC 20500

Phone: (202)456.1111
Fax: (202)456-2461

Email: http://www.whitehouse.gov/contact/

 

BLM Washington Office

Secretary of the Interior

Ken Salazar

U.S. Department of the Interior
1849 C Street NW, Rm. 5665
Washington DC 20240
Phone: 202-208-3801

feedback@ios.doi.gov
Secretary_of_the_Interior@ios.doi.gov

 

BLM Director: Bob Abbey
E-mail: Director@blm.gov
Deputy Director (Operations): Mike Pool
E-mail: Mike_Pool@blm.gov
Acting Deputy Director (Programs and Policy): Neil Kornze
E-mail: nkornze@blm.gov
Chief of Staff: Janet Lin
E-mail: janet_lin@blm.gov

 

U.S Fish and Wildlife Service
Alaska Region 

Geoffrey Haskett

1011 East Tudor Road

Anchorage, AK 99503

Phone: 907‐ 786‐3309

Fax: 907‐ 786‐3495

Geoff_Haskett@fws.gov

Four existing areas of western Arctic Alaska within the National Petroluem Reserve lack permanent protection as the U.S. Department of the Interior's Bureau of Land Management is deciding what to do with 23 million acres of public land where caribou and other wildlife live.


 


These four regions need protection because of the exceptional biodiversity among marine mammals including polar bears, walruses, beluga whales, and seals. The area is also important for two large caribou herds and vital for community subsistence among northern and western Alaskan communities, as well as grizzly bears, wolves, wolverines, and arctic foxes. The wetlands  provide vital nesting, feeding, and staging habitats for migratory bird populations, including many that disperse to all lower 48 states.


 


The BLM could choose to preserve the caribou's habitat. Don't let oil and gas development destroy it.


 

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