Refine Results
Region
Document Type
Topic
Species Category

Documents

21 resources match your filter criteria.

Scoping Report for Northern Fur Seal Harvest Regulations Environmental Assessment

This report reviews the comments received during the scoping period regarding St. George Traditional Council's proposed changes to the northern fur seal harvest regulations.
April 10, 2012 - NEPA ,

Biological Opinion on the Full Implementation of the Preferred Alternative of the Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement for Research on Steller Sea Lions and Northern Fur Seals

Biological opinion on the issuance of Steller sea lion and Northern fur seal research permits for federally funded research on Steller sea lions and Northern fur seals.
July 29, 2009 - Biological Opinion ,

The Pribilof Islands, Preserving the Legacy (2008)

The federal government's legacy at the Pribilof Islands, Alaska, began with the purchase of Russian America from Imperial Russia in 1867. Enterprising American businessmen rushed to the Pribilof Islands in 1868 to exploit the Alaska Territory.
August 24, 2008 - Other Reports ,

Conservation Plan for the Eastern Pacific Stock of Northern Fur Seal, Callorhinus Ursinus (2007)

Revision of the 1993 conservation plan for northern fur seals (Callorhinus ursinus) to incorporate new information obtained since the original plan was completed.
December 01, 2007 - Other Reports ,

Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement for Steller Sea Lion and Northern Fur Seal Research

This Final Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement assesses the environmental impacts associated with research on northern fur seals and Steller sea lions.
May 01, 2007 - NEPA ,

The Northern Fur Seal (Callorhinus Ursinus) Bibliography

The principal breeding grounds of the northern fur seal (Callorhinus ursinus) occur on the Pribilof Islands in the eastern Bering Sea. These islands were discovered in 1786 by the crew of the St. George, a Russian ship under the command of Gerasim Gavrilovich Pribilof. Breeding colonies occur in various other locations in the Pacific Ocean and Bering Sea; among the newest is a rapidly growing rookery on Bogoslof Island (first colonized about 1980; see reference 1123) just north of the Aleutian island chain. The first fur seal to be seen by a European was sighted in 1741 (by Georg Wilhelm Steller, Aug. 10, south of Kodiak Island; reference 1579). Since that time, especially in this century, the northern fur seal (sometimes called the Alaska fur seal) has been the subject of both intensive and extensive biological studies, more so than most other wild living large mammals. At the same time, these animals have helped promote a growing awareness of marine mammal issues by the general public. Fur seals have been the focus of wildlife conservation through public concern, as an economic resource, and as an indicator of the health of the ecosystems in which it occurs. As a result, there is a large volume of formal and informal literature on fur seals – from scientific investigations to more popularized accounts of the fur seal's extraordinary life history. The importance of the resulting scientific information is emphasized by a population that has been declining for the past two decades – a change with implications regarding past and present anthropogenic activities.
October 22, 2006 - Other Reports ,

The Subsistence Harvest of Northern Fur Seals on the Pribilof Islands in 2005

This report contains information about the subsistence fur seal harvest on the Pribilof Islands, Alaska.
August 01, 2006 - Other Reports ,

Subsistence Harvest of Northern Fur Seals on the Pribilof Islands in 2004

Subsistence harvest report for northern fur seals in St. George and St. Paul Islands of Alaska.
January 15, 2005 - Other Reports ,