The northern Bering Sea is rich in organisms such as clams and crabs. Here, men fish for crab on the frozen waters around the island of Little Diomede.
© Getty ImagesOn Dec. 9, 2016, President Barack Obama issued an executive order designating the globally significant U.S. northern Bering Sea and Bering Strait region as the Northern Bering Sea Climate Resilience Area. Learn more about the communities and wildlife in this special place, the stresses and climate change impacts they face, and how strong leadership from regional tribes led to today’s action.
The health, well-being, and culture of these indigenous communities are fueled by resources such as marine mammals, fish, birds, algae, shellfish, and other invertebrates. Hunting of large marine mammals can take place as far as 80 miles from shore.
The northern Bering Sea is rich in organisms such as clams and crabs. Here, men fish for crab on the frozen waters around the island of Little Diomede.
© Getty ImagesThe executive action comes at the request of indigenous residents of the region, the Bering Sea Elders Group, and two nonprofit consortia representing over 70 tribes: Kawerak Inc. and the Association of Village Council Presidents.
The Bering Strait is relatively narrow at 44 nautical miles across, with the islands of Little Diomede (U.S., foreground) and Big Diomede (Russia, background) in the middle. It is a natural chokepoint for marine traffic and wildlife migrations between the Arctic and Pacific oceans.
© Getty ImagesAmong the animals that travel these waters and the surrounding area are marine mammals (including four species of ice seals; beluga, gray, and bowhead whales; Pacific walruses; and polar bears), migratory seabirds and sea ducks (such as crested auklets; thick-billed murres; black-legged kittiwakes; king, common, and spectacled eiders), diverse seafloor-dwelling invertebrates (clams, amphipods, and crabs), and fish species (including five Pacific salmon species, herring, halibut, and saffron cod).
Almost the entire western Arctic population of bowhead whales, such as this one, migrates through the northern Bering Sea twice each year. These slow-moving whales are sensitive to fast-moving ships, noise, and smells.
© National Oceanic and Atmospheric AdministrationThis measure was carefully implemented by the North Pacific Fishery Management Council in 2008. The new executive order maintains this protection.
These fisheries include salmon, crab, halibut, and herring and will continue to operate in the new protected area.
Salmon dry in the sunlight. Traditional methods of securing, preparing, and preserving foods are a strong component of indigenous community life in the region.
© The Washington PostIn the next decade, ship traffic through the region is projected to increase by 100 to 500 percent. Communities worry about potential impacts from marine pollution, including sewage and food waste. The president’s order directs agencies to develop solutions to limit vessel discharge in the most ecologically sensitive areas.
Today’s action permanently protects those areas from consideration of any future leasing.
Walruses, such as those shown here, are among the most important cultural and subsistence resources in the Bering Strait region. They use the ice as a platform to dive for food at the seafloor, haulout, and give birth. The entire population of Pacific walrus overwinters in the Bering Sea.
© iStockBased in Anchorage, Alaska, Eleanor Huffines leads Pew’s U.S. Arctic conservation work.