North

New measures proposed to save Bathurst caribou herd

The N.W.T. government wants to limit the harvest of its largest caribou herd to cope with a dramatic population decline.

The N.W.T. government wants to limit the harvest of its largest caribou herd to cope with a dramatic decline in its population.

The Bathurstcaribou herd, which lives between Yellowknife and the ArcticOcean,has decreased by 74 per cent in the past 20 years, droppingfrom 472,000 to 128,000.

The government, which released its proposalsTuesday, wants to reduce the number of caribou permits given to hunting companies and toban the commercial sale of caribou meat.

Itwants to establish a no-hunting corridor along winter roads in the Tlicho region.

It also wants aboriginal hunters to report the number of caribou theykill.Non-aboriginal hunters are already required to do so.

Environment and Natural Resources spokesperson Bob Bailey said the government would like to limit the harvest to four per cent of the herd, or about 5,000 animals a year.

Harvest easy to adjust: Bailey

"There's a number of things that affect caribou herd populations, but harvest is one of the ones that we can adjust much easier than we can other elements, like, for example, climate change," Bailey said.

The government's proposals now go to theWek'eezhii Renewable Resources Board so people in the Tlicho territory can review them before making their own recommendationsto the government.

The Bathurst herd is one of several barren ground herdsexperiencing a sharp population decline.