Aboriginal groups fear for George River caribou herd - Action News
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Aboriginal groups fear for George River caribou herd

The George River caribou herd, which migrates between northern Quebec and Labrador, was once the largest in the world. Its population has dropped by 98 per cent in the past two decades and there is still no cross-border management plan.

Nunavik Inuit call for an end to Quebec sport hunt; Labrador Inuit want better management

Caribou swim across the George River. The river flows north to Ungava Bay from Lake Jannire, running just west of the Quebec/Labrador border. In the past four years, the George River caribou herd has declined by 80 per cent and there is still no cross-border management plan in place. (Wikimedia Commons)

The George River caribou herd, which migrates between northern Quebec and Labrador, has dropped by 80 per cent in the past four years, and there is still no cross-border management plan.

The George River originates east of Shefferville in Quebec, flowing parallel to the Quebec/Labrador border. (Wikipedia)
There are now about 14,200 animals left in the herd, down from 700,000 to 800,000 in the 1980s a decline of 98per cent over two decades in what was once the largest caribou herd in the world.

Thomas Shea remembers a time when caribou were plentifulin the Kuujjuaq, Que. area.

The land had veins everywhere, of trails of caribou, says the president of Kuujjuaqs Hunters and Trappers Organization. Now those trails are no longer there.

Shea places the blame squarely on commercial hunters, who he says kill large males for trophy antlers.

The bulls are gone and they're not reproducing anymore, he says. It's very scary if we have to face that.

He says an end to the sport hunt might be the only way to bring the George River herd back from the brink.

Legal win a step in the right direction

Thomas Shea, the head of the hunters and trappers group in Kuujjuaq, Que., blames the decline of the George River caribou on trophy hunters. In the last four years, the herd's population dropped by 80 per cent. (Shaun Malley/CBC)
Earlier this month, the Quebec Court of Appeal found the provincial government violated treaty rights when it set caribou sport hunting levels and dates for the 2011-2012 season in northern Quebec in spite of objections from Inuit, Cree andNaskapi.

Quebec now has to pay damages to the three groups.

TunuNapartuk,Kuujjuaqsmayor, says thats good news.

"This is one step in the right direction. There's preparations that we need to do in order to ensure that this herd continues to improve."

Napartuksays he's optimistic about the future of the herd.

The Newfoundland and Labrador government implemented a five-year ban on hunting caribou in Labrador in 2013 that remains in effect.

That ban included the aboriginal hunt.

But it applies onlywhentheherdisin Labrador. The Newfoundland and Labrador government has no control over theanimals whenthey migrate into Quebec.

A news release announcing the recent population survey says both provinces"have initiated discussions on the development of a joint management plan in collaboration with all resource users including aboriginal governments and organizations."

More should have been done sooner

'Up until the province called a ban two years ago there was no real management plan for the George River Caribou herd,' says Sarah Leo, president of Nunatsiavut. (CBC)
Nunatsiavut President Sarah Leo says more should have been done sooner to protect the herd.

She says the caribou are culturally important and a critical food source for Labrador Inuit.

Leo says governments need to invest in finding out why the herd is dying out so quickly, and she hopes it's not already too late.

Up until the province called a ban two years ago there was no real management plan for the George River Caribou herd, so I think the numbers fell quickly. But more should have been done sooner. And let's hope we can come up together with a really strong management plan that works for everyone.

Leo says calving grounds in particular need to be protected.

She says all the stakeholders need to act now to preserve what's left of the herd.

Labrador Innu chief: hunting ban not the answer

The newly elected Innu nation Grand Chief Anastasia Qupee says a hunting moratorium is not the answer.

She says there are many issues at play in the decline of the herd, including mining, hydroelectric development and climate change, and the government needs to look at the bigger picture instead of focusing on hunting.

One of the elders said to me very clearly, he said if they take away the caribou away from us, he said, we are left to starve. So to me that needs to be discussed more and like we've said we've offered a management plan with the province, and to work with them, so a moratorium doesn't solve the issue.

Qupee says the Innu Nation has imposed guidelines within their own communities and they have guardians who supervise the caribou hunt.