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Stop Alaska’s Horrific Helicopter Bear Hunts
Final signature count: 4,349
4,349 signatures toward our 30,000 goal
Sponsor: The Animal Rescue Site
Alaska can help caribou without gunning down bears from helicopters. State leaders must suspend this program now.
A judge has allowed Alaska wildlife agents to resume killing black and brown bears, including from helicopters, as part of a state effort to support the Mulchatna caribou herd.1 The decision arrived as the caribou calving season approached, when predator-control operations can move quickly and cause irreversible harm.
The Mulchatna herd has declined sharply from historic levels, and its loss has harmed subsistence access for Alaska Native communities. That reality deserves serious action. But killing bears from the air is a severe response that must meet the highest scientific and public accountability standards.
The Program Remains Under Legal Challenge
Alaska Beacon reported that the ruling allows the Department of Fish and Game to kill bears ahead of calving season while conservation groups continue to challenge the program.2 The Center for Biological Diversity said the litigation contests the reinstated bear-control program and argues that Alaska has not shown the unrestrained killing of bears will restore the herd.3
Alaska Wildlife Alliance says the state created the bear-control program without adequate public review and that state personnel and contractors killed nearly 200 bears in earlier operations.4 Reuters previously reported that environmental groups sued Alaska over the aerial hunting program, arguing that the state had failed to assess impacts on bear populations and sustainability.6
Caribou Recovery Must Be Science-Based
The Alaska Department of Fish and Game’s 2026 intensive management report describes predator removal connected to Mulchatna caribou management.5 But public documents and agency goals are not a substitute for independent review, transparent population data, and clear limits that prevent excessive harm to bears.
Alaska’s governor, Department of Fish and Game, and Board of Game have the power to suspend the program, require outside scientific review, disclose bear population impacts, and shift resources toward habitat, disease, nutrition, climate resilience, and community-based caribou recovery.
Caribou deserve protection. So do bears. Alaska should not pit species against each other through a program that uses helicopters and lethal force before the public can trust the science behind it.
Sign now to urge Alaska leaders to suspend helicopter bear killing and require independent, science-based caribou recovery that protects all wildlife.
The Petition
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