Current through September 25, 2024
Section 5 AAC 92.121 - Intensive Management Plan V(a)Plan established. The intensive management plan for the Unit 13 Wolf Predation Control Area is established in this section.(b)Unit 13 Wolf Predation Control Area: the Unit 13 Predation Control Area is established and consists of all lands within Units 13(A), 13(B), 13(C), 13(D), and that portion of Unit 13(E) east of the Alaska Railroad, except National Park Service and other federal lands where same-day-airborne take of wildlife is not allowed, encompassing approximately 21,066 square miles. The control program for this area is as follows: (1) this is a continuing control program that was first authorized by the board in 2000 for wolf control; it is currently designed to increase moose numbers and harvest by reducing predation on moose by wolves, thereby improving recruitement rates, and is expected to make a contribution to achieving the intensive management (IM) objectives in Unit 13;(2) moose and wolf objectives are as follows: (A) moose IM objectives for Units 13(A), 13(B), 13(C), 13(D), and 13(E) as established in 5 AAC 92.108 are 3,500 - 4,200, 5,300 - 6,300, 2,000 - 3,000, 1,200 - 1,900 and 5,000 - 6,000 moose respectively;(B) the moose harvest objectives for Units 13(A), 13(B), 13(C), 13(D), and 13(E) as established in 5 AAC 92.108 are 210 - 420, 310 - 620, 155 - 350, 75 - 190, and 300 - 600 moose respectively; (C) the department adopted a range of 135 - 165 wolves as the late winter minimum abundance for unit 13; Maintaining this minimum population size will allow for sustained yield of wolves and will ensure that wolves persist in the control area;(3) board findings concerning populations and human use are as follows: (A) moose harvest has been consistently below IM objectives in Units 13(B), 13(C), and 13(E); (B) predation by wolves is an important cause of the failure to achieve population and harvest objectives; (C) a reduction in wolf predation in Unit 13 can reasonably be expected to make progress toward achieving the Unit 13(A), 13(B), 13(C), 13(D), and 13(E) IM objectives for moose; (D) reducing predation is likely to be effective and feasible using recognized and prudent active management techniques and based on scientific information; (E) reducing predation is likely to be effective given land ownership patterns, and; (F) reducing predation is in the best interest of subsistence users; Unit 13 has long been an important hunting area for subsistence by local area residents and much of the state's population in Anchorage, the Matanuska-Susitna Valley, as well as Fairbanks and other communities around the state; it is recognized under the state's intensive management law as an area where moose are to be managed for high levels of human consumptive use;(4) authorized methods and means are as follows: (A) hunting and trapping of wolves by the public in the Unit 13 wolf Predation Control Area during the term of the program will occur as provided in the hunting and trapping regulations set out elsewhere in this title, including the use of motorized vehicles; (B) notwithstanding any other provisions in this title, the commissioner may issue public aerial permits or public land-and-shoot permits as a method for wolf removal under AS 16.05.783; (5) time frame is as follows: (A) through July 1, 2031, the commissioner may authorize the removal of wolves in the Unit 13 Predation Control Area; (B) annually, the department shall, to the extent practicable, provide to the board a report of program activities conducted during the preceding 12 months, including implementation activities, the status of moose and wolf populations, and recommendations for changes, if necessary, to achieve the objectives of the plan; (6) the commissioner will review, modify or suspend program activities as follows: (A) when the mid-point of the IM population and harvest objectives for the moose population is achieved;(B) when wolf inventories or accumulated information from permittees indicate the need to avoid reducing wolf numbers below the management objective of 135 wolves specified in this subsection; (C) if after three years, the harvest of wolves is not sufficient to make progress towards the intensive management population objectives for wolves; (D) predation control activities may be suspended; (i) if after three years, there is no detectable increase in the total number of moose in the control area; (ii) if after three years, any measure such as estimates of rump fat, short-veariing mass, and twinning rates, consistent with significant levels of nutritional stress in the moose population are identified; (iii) when the moose population and harvest objectives within Unit 13 predation control area have been met.(c) Habitat Enhancement. The department may plan and execute habitat enhancement projects in areas identified for improvement based on evidence at the landscape or population level through prescribed burns, wildfire, or mechanical means to increase the in potential carrying capacity across the range in Unit 13. Eff. 10/1/93, Register 127; am 8/18/95, Register 135; am 7/1/96, Register 138; add'l am 7/1/96, Register 138; am 7/27/97, Register 143; am 2/22/2000, Register 153; am 7/1/2000, Register 154; am 7/19/2000, Register 155; am 1/3/2001, Register 156; am 7/1/2001, Register 158; am 8/22/2001, Register 159; am 7/26/2003, Register 167; am 7/1/2004, Register 170; am 1/1/2005, Register 172; am 7/1/2005, Register 174; am 1/26/2006, Register 177; am 6/24/2006, Register 178; am 9/1/2006, Register 179; am 7/1/2007, Register 182; am 3/21/2008, Register 186; am 5/20/2008, Register 186; am 5/21/2009, Register 190; am 7/1/2009, Register 190; am 5/16/2010, Register 194; am 7/1/2010, Register 194; add'l am 7/1/2010, Register 194; am 12/15/2010, Register 196; am 1/29/2011, Register 197; am 5/14/2011, Register 198; am 7/1/2011, Register 198; am 3/24/2012, Register 201; am 4/1/2012, Register 201; am 7/1/2012, Register 202; am 7/1/2016, Register 218, July 2016; am 6/23/2022, Register 242, July 2022Authority:AS 16.05.255
AS 16.05.270
AS 16.05.783