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John, One of the most remote and sensitive wildlife habitats in America is about to be destroyed. The Bureau of Land Management is proposing opening up 18 million acres of the Western Arctic for oil leasing.1 Drilling could flatten the dens of arctic foxes and cut off the annual migration of caribou. Defend the Western Arctic from drilling. Submit your public comment by the Nov. 21 deadline. 18 million acres is an impossibly large area to take away from wild animals and sell off to oil companies. The places proposed for drilling include special areas that were set aside to protect wildlife, such as Teshekpuk Lake and the Colville River.2,3 The Teshekpuk Lake caribou herd depends on its namesake, the largest lake in Alaska's Arctic. Baby caribou are born lakeside as ducks like the threatened spectacled eider glide along the water.4,5 The Colville River cuts through the tundra, creating high cliffs perfect for nesting birds like the arctic peregrine falcon. Millions of birds are born in the Western Arctic every summer, including along the banks of this river.6 Polar bears roam the islands of ice in the Chukchi Sea and massive groups of walruses hold court along the icy shoreline. Polar bears move back to land to build their dens under the frosty landscape.7,8 Every single one of these places is a critical wildlife habitat. And every single one could soon be sold for oil exploration. It would be a grave mistake to trade away the homes of irreplaceable caribou, polar bears, migratory birds, muskox, walruses, arctic foxes and on and on. These animals depend on the beautiful, unspoiled natural spaces of the Western Arctic. We should at least spare some of this pristine and wild landscape for them. We're calling on the Bureau of Land Management to not offer any oil leases on tracts in the 13 million acres of special areas already set aside for wildlife. Thank you, Ellen Montgomery |
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