Habitat Management for Alaska's Tongass National Forest

Steven emphasizes the value of undeveloped winter range for Sitka black-tailed deer in southeastern Alaska’s Tongass National Forest.

• Created by Theodore Roosevelt in 1908, the Tongass National Forest is the largest national forest in the United States at 17 million acres.
• Safeguarding the last remaining undeveloped forests in the Tongass National Forest is key to maintaining the region’s high deer populations and high quality hunting.
• The U.S. Department of Agriculture and others are working to transition the traditional southeast Alaska economy so public lands management benefits both people and wildlife.
• The proposed “Sealaska” legislation could end public ownership and access on more than 70,000 acres of the highest quality national forest lands in southeast Alaska.


Season 1: Episode 4

Partners:

U.S. Forest Service: Transition framework for the Tongass National Forest

Sportsmen’s Alliance for Alaska

Trout Unlimited

 

presented by TRCP's Conservation Field Notes