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The Land
Beaufort Region
(Part II)
by
David Morrison
Curator of N.W.T. Archaeology
(District of Mackenzie)
Canadian Museum of Civilization
Vegetation
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Animal Resources
The Western Arctic is also very well endowed with animal resources (Martell et al. 1984). Particularly important are beluga whales, a small circumpolar white whale about 4 metres in length. In summer, they are very abundant in the esutaries of the Mackenzie River mouth, where they are much hunted. Some years they enter the Eskimo Lakes where, if they linger, they can be in danger from encroaching ice. Belugas cannot deal with extensive sea ice and are therefore migratory, wintering in the ice free waters of the north Pacific. With them on their migratory travels journey the much larger bowheads, baleen whales up to 18 metres in length.The mainstay of Arctic commercial whaling (Bockstoce 1986), bowheads were nearly exterminated in the Western Arctic before the First World War, but are making a cautious comeback today.
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On land, fish are a staple food resource, particularly cisco, whitefish, and burbot. Most are summer spawners, and can be taken in huge numbers with nets.
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The domesticated, Old World cousins of the caribou - reindeer - were introduced to the Mackenzie area early in this century by a Canadian Federal Government keen on helping local people deal with the caribou crash. It was never a complete success, since Inuvialuit were not that interested in becoming herders rather than hunters. However, a now privately owned herd of several thousand animals still lives on the Tuktoyaktuk Peninsula. Its sole commercial function is to produce velvet antler for the oriental aphrodisiac market.
There are other, larger animals. Polar bears are the largest terrestrial
carnivores on earth, and can sometimes be found in coastal regions,
particularly around the outer headlands such as Cape Bathurst.
Occasionally they wander inland as far as Fort MacPherson or Tsiigehtchic
(Arctic Red
River). More common are grizzly bears, which are relatively abundant in the
Richardson Mountains, or east of the River around the Horton and Anderson
Rivers. Moose occasionally wander north of treeline in summer, browsing on
in rich willow thickets. And muskox can be found in a few areas. By 1900
they were extinct in Alaska and all but eliminated west of Coronation Gulf,
but like many other Arctic animals they are making a good comeback in the
20th century (Barr 1991). Muskox can now be seen around the Horton River,
and also on the Yukon Arctic coast, where an introduced Alaskan
population is expanding. They were probably never common in the
Mackenzie valley itself.
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