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Alaska approves hunting of musk oxen stranded on ice floes

By DAN JOLING, Associated Press
Published: October 15, 2015, 6:32pm

ANCHORAGE, Alaska  — Alaska big game officials have legalized an unusual hunt that will take a boat and a bold hand.

Starting Thursday, Alaska residents can harvest musk oxen that wander onto Bering Sea ice and become stranded when floes break and drift off.

Musk oxen stranded on ice are doomed to drown or starve, said Patrick Jones, assistant state area biologist.

“This occurs every couple of years,” Jones said from his office in Bethel. “It just seems like a waste for them not to harvest these animals.”

There is little chance stranded musk oxen could swim to shore in the icy waters. “They’re just terrible swimmers,” Jones said.

The Alaska Board of Game changed the rule at the suggestion of residents of Mekoryuk, a Cu’pik Eskimo community of 210 and the only village on Nunivak Island, which lies 30 miles off the Seward Peninsula, the projection of land north of the Aleutian Islands.

Musk oxen are stocky, long-haired animals that disappeared from Alaska by the 1920s, according to the Alaska Department of Fish and Game. Thirty-four East Greenland musk oxen were moved in 1935 to Nunivak Island, where they thrived. Animals from the transplanted herd were used to start four other Alaska herds and two in Russia.

Bulls stand 5 feet high at the shoulder and weigh up to 800 pounds. Cows reach 4 feet at the shoulder and can weigh up to 500 pounds. Their horns cover nearly their entire forehead. 

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When threatened, cows circle around calves, horns out, to protect the youngsters.

A survey in June estimated 740 musk oxen are on Nunivak, well above the department’s target of 500 to 550. The department manages the numbers with hunting.

Doomed musk oxen on ice floes are most often spotted by hunters in boats seeking marine mammals. When hunting walrus or seal, hunters try to shoot the animal on ice so it doesn’t sink. After a kill, they will run their boats right onto the ice to butcher the animal. If hunters harvest a musk ox, Jones expects the same thing to happen.

“They’re pretty much experts at that kind of thing anyway, more so than the average person,” Jones said.

No one is sure why musk oxen wander on to sea ice. They might be heading to the mainland or one of the smaller islands. “I think they’re heading toward things they can see or smell in the distance,” Jones said.

Ice covers much of the Bering Sea in winter. In spring, shore-fast ice routinely breaks and floats off. Pieces can be a quarter-acre or miles long, Jones said.

Alaska already had a hunting provision for musk oxen stranded on tiny islands that did not have enough summer food to keep the animals from starving. Hunters could apply for an emergency order to shoot them, Jones said. The process could take up to four days.

That wouldn’t work with musk oxen on sea ice. Winds and tides can move ice miles. “You may not be able to find that ice floe again,” Jones said.

The new hunt requires hunters to provide photographic proof that the animal was surrounded by salt water. That’s a reasonable trade-off for not needing a permit, Jones said. “Most people have cellphones these days,” he said.

Musk oxen are highly desired as game. 

“A lot of people compare it to a goat or sheep. Also, it’s one of the few wild animals that has fat marbled through the meat,” Jones said. “It’s incredible. It’s really rich.”

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