Wooden structure and caribou antlers

Photo By/Credit

Hillebrand, Steve/USFWS

Date Shot/Created
08/21/2006
Media Usage Rights/License
Public Domain
Image
This image depicts a Selawik National Wildlife Refuge building and pile of caribou antlers nearby. In a remote corner of northwestern Alaska lies Selawik Refuge, a special place of extreme climate, free-flowing rivers, and abundant wildlife. Here where the boreal forest of Interior Alaska meets the arctic tundra, thousands of waterfowl, shorebirds, fish, insects and other creatures rest, breed and feed in the vast wetlands complex that is the heart of the Selawik Refuge. Here also is the homeland of the Iñupiat, where local people hunt, fish and gather as their ancestors have done for thousands of years. Over two million acres of land make up the refuge, which straddles the Arctic Circle and offers adventure and rejuvenation for visitors.
Subject tags
Work of the Service
Wildlife refuges
Wildlife management
Rivers and streams
Climate change