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Caribou have been using the same Arctic calving grounds for more than 3,000 years. Female caribou shed their antlers within days of giving birth, leaving behind a record of their annual travels ...
Drone Video Captures Caribou From the AirA drone camera films a herd of caribou as they migrate in Western Canada. The footage offers a unique look at the behavior of individuals within the herd.
As the U.S. government mandates drilling in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, Gwich’in people in northern Yukon ...
A new study warns of catastrophic caribou decline by 2100, with warming temperatures and human activity driving the highest ...
A First Nations-led project in British Columbia has helped a caribou herd rebound from extinction in under a decade's time.
Canada is threatening to use, for the first time, a provision in endangered species legislation to intervene and force caribou habitat protection in Quebec.
Reindeer populations across the Arctic will likely decline due to future climate change with the North American population ...
Subsistence hunters living in Northwest Alaska and parts of the North Slope are now only allowed to hunt up to 15 animals a year on state lands — a significant change from the previous limit of ...
Caribou were the single most important food source on the tundra, and every part of the animal was appreciated and used. Their skins became material for clothing, tents, blankets, and sleds. Their ...
Mountain caribou, commonly described as “a canary in a coal mine,” are animals that rely on their ecosystem to be heathy; and their disappearance are an indication of the unstableness the ...
Feb. 1—State game managers reduced bag limits for subsistence and nonresident hunters this week to preserve the declining Western Arctic Caribou Herd. The Alaska Board of Game concluded its ...
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