Kelp-Fed Beef, Swimming Caribou, Feral Reindeer, and Their Hunters: Island Mammals in a Marine Economy

Aleutian Islands and Alaska Peninsula residents have selectively introduced land mammals to their primarily marine based economy over the past two centuries. This paper describes these many introductions, contexts, and the longer term roles of these cattle, sheep, reindeer, and other land mammals in...

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Published in:Sustainability
Main Author: Katherine Reedy
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/su8020113
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2071-1050/8/2/113/ 2023-08-20T04:10:23+02:00 Kelp-Fed Beef, Swimming Caribou, Feral Reindeer, and Their Hunters: Island Mammals in a Marine Economy Katherine Reedy agris 2016-01-26 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/su8020113 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute Tourism, Culture, and Heritage https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su8020113 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Sustainability; Volume 8; Issue 2; Pages: 113 aleutians introduced species invasive species subsistence conservation food security Text 2016 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/su8020113 2023-07-31T20:49:53Z Aleutian Islands and Alaska Peninsula residents have selectively introduced land mammals to their primarily marine based economy over the past two centuries. This paper describes these many introductions, contexts, and the longer term roles of these cattle, sheep, reindeer, and other land mammals in discrete island settings and the regional food economy based upon interviews in ten communities and comprehensive household surveys in eight of these. Caribou are indigenous and traditionally hunted in other parts of the state but are legally “invasive” in island contexts now managed by the federal government. Access to land and natural resources by Alaska Natives and rural peoples is regulated by state and federal agencies, but Aleutian residents have shaped their environment and engineered food sources to support their communities. This paper demonstrates that hardline approaches to removing invasive land mammal species will have human consequences and an integrated management policy emphasizing food security and conservation that includes reducing the density of these introduced species is most appropriate. Text Alaska Aleutian Islands MDPI Open Access Publishing Sustainability 8 2 113
institution Open Polar
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
op_collection_id ftmdpi
language English
topic aleutians
introduced species
invasive species
subsistence
conservation
food security
spellingShingle aleutians
introduced species
invasive species
subsistence
conservation
food security
Katherine Reedy
Kelp-Fed Beef, Swimming Caribou, Feral Reindeer, and Their Hunters: Island Mammals in a Marine Economy
topic_facet aleutians
introduced species
invasive species
subsistence
conservation
food security
description Aleutian Islands and Alaska Peninsula residents have selectively introduced land mammals to their primarily marine based economy over the past two centuries. This paper describes these many introductions, contexts, and the longer term roles of these cattle, sheep, reindeer, and other land mammals in discrete island settings and the regional food economy based upon interviews in ten communities and comprehensive household surveys in eight of these. Caribou are indigenous and traditionally hunted in other parts of the state but are legally “invasive” in island contexts now managed by the federal government. Access to land and natural resources by Alaska Natives and rural peoples is regulated by state and federal agencies, but Aleutian residents have shaped their environment and engineered food sources to support their communities. This paper demonstrates that hardline approaches to removing invasive land mammal species will have human consequences and an integrated management policy emphasizing food security and conservation that includes reducing the density of these introduced species is most appropriate.
format Text
author Katherine Reedy
author_facet Katherine Reedy
author_sort Katherine Reedy
title Kelp-Fed Beef, Swimming Caribou, Feral Reindeer, and Their Hunters: Island Mammals in a Marine Economy
title_short Kelp-Fed Beef, Swimming Caribou, Feral Reindeer, and Their Hunters: Island Mammals in a Marine Economy
title_full Kelp-Fed Beef, Swimming Caribou, Feral Reindeer, and Their Hunters: Island Mammals in a Marine Economy
title_fullStr Kelp-Fed Beef, Swimming Caribou, Feral Reindeer, and Their Hunters: Island Mammals in a Marine Economy
title_full_unstemmed Kelp-Fed Beef, Swimming Caribou, Feral Reindeer, and Their Hunters: Island Mammals in a Marine Economy
title_sort kelp-fed beef, swimming caribou, feral reindeer, and their hunters: island mammals in a marine economy
publisher Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
publishDate 2016
url https://doi.org/10.3390/su8020113
op_coverage agris
genre Alaska
Aleutian Islands
genre_facet Alaska
Aleutian Islands
op_source Sustainability; Volume 8; Issue 2; Pages: 113
op_relation Tourism, Culture, and Heritage
https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su8020113
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3390/su8020113
container_title Sustainability
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container_issue 2
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