Caribou hunting quotas make scapegoats out of northern First Nations: study
Newly published research argues Indigenous hunting didn’t cause the collapse of once-mighty caribou herds in Canada’s North and harvest bans only force First Nations to shoulder the blame for problems they didn’t create.
The paper in Science Advances concludes the more likely cause for the disastrous declines is the cumulative effects of mineral exploration.
“The scapegoat is the Indigenous person who depends on caribou for subsistence,” says the paper’s author Brenda Parlee, a biologist at the University of Alberta. “It’s easier to point the finger at somebody with a gun than it is to look at the more complicated problem of habitat disturbance.”
A biologist with the Northwest Territories says restrictions on a crucial northern food are necessary to prevent the Bathurst caribou from disappearing. Jan Adamczewski said some quotas were requested by First Nations governments.


