Periodic Report on the
Application of the World Heritage Convention
|
Section II Report on the
State of Conservation of Kluane_Wrangell-St. Elias_Glacier
Bay_Tatshenshini-Alsek
|
| 1 INTRODUCTION |
| 1a State Party |
|
CANADA and the UNITED STATES OF
AMERICA |
| 1b Name of World Heritage
Site |
|
Kluane_Wrangell-St. Elias_Glacier
Bay_Tatshenshini-Alsek |
| 1c Geographic
Coordinates |
|
- Latitude 58°45’ N / Longitude 136°10’ W
- Latitude 59°31’ N / Longitude 137°14’
W
|
| 1d Date of inscription |
|
26/10/79 |
| 1e Date of subsequent
extension(s) |
|
14/12/92 |
|
17/12/94 |
| 1f Organization(s) responsible for
the preparation of report |
|
| Organization Name: |
U.S. National Park Service |
| Name: |
Snitzler, Vicki |
| Title: |
Outdoor Planner |
| Address: |
Wrangell-St.Elias National Park, 106.8
Richardson Hwy |
| City: |
Copper Center, Alaska |
| Postal Code: |
99573 |
| Telephone: |
907-822-5234 |
| Fax Number: |
907-822-7216 |
| Email: |
Vicki_Snitzler@nps.gov | |
|
| Organization Name: |
Ministry of Water Land and
Air |
| Name: |
Levy, Peter |
| Title: |
Planning Section Head |
| Address: |
Bag 5000, 3726 Alfred Avenue |
| City: |
Smithers, BC |
| Postal Code: |
V0J 2N0 |
| Telephone: |
250 847-7289 |
| Fax Number: |
250 847-7728 |
| Email: |
peter.levy@gems6.gov.bc.ca | |
|
| Organization Name: |
Parks Canada |
| Name: |
Elliot, Tom |
| Title: |
Visitor and Wilderness Management
Research |
| Address: |
Yukon Field Unit, 205-300 Main
Street |
| City: |
Whitehorse, Yukon |
| Postal Code: |
Y1A 2B5 |
| Telephone: |
867-667-3915 |
| Fax Number: |
867-393-6701 |
| Email: |
tom.elliot@pc.gc.ca | |
|
| Organization Name: |
U.S. National Park Service |
| Name: |
Yerxa, Rusty |
| Title: |
Writer/Editor Glacier Bay National Park
and Preserve |
| Address: |
P.O Box 140 |
| City: |
Gustavus, Alaska |
| Postal Code: |
99826 |
| Telephone: |
907 697-2675 |
| Fax Number: |
907 697-2654 |
| Email: |
Rusty_Yerxa@nps.gov | |
| 1g Date of submittal of
report |
|
31/12/04 |
| 1h Signature(s) on behalf of State
Party |
|
Christina Cameron - Director General, National Historic Sites, Parks
Canada |
| |
| 2 STATEMENT OF
SIGNIFICANCE |
| 2a Original justification for
inscription |
|
Kluane National Park and Reserve and
Wrangell-St. Elias National Monument were nominated jointly by Canada and
the United States and inscribed as a transboundary World Heritage Site in
October 1979. Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve was nominated as a
geological and ecological extension of the existing World Heritage Site
and was inscribed as an addition to the site in December 1992. The
Tatshenshini-Alsek Provincial Wilderness Park was added to the existing
World Heritage Site in 1994.
The 1979 nomination
focussed on the dominant natural characteristic of the joint properties -
the glacier ice and snowfields of the St. Elias Mountains. It noted that
this is the largest non-polar icefield in the world, contains examples of
some of the world’s most spectacular glaciers and a rich variety of land
ecosystems. Within the montane forest, coastal forest, sub-alpine zone,
and alpine tundra are complex and intricate mosaics of plant life at
various successional stages. Such a huge area of natural sub-arctic
vegetational patterns is unique in North America. The nomination also
described the features of geological interest in the area, as well as the
ongoing tectonic, volcanic and hydrological processes that are evident.
Further, the nomination noted that the immense
size of the joint properties contains the entire watershed of dozens of
major rivers and pristine ecosystems that are unaltered by human
activities and isolated by natural barriers from external influences.
“There are few places in the world where the ecological processes such as
predation, migration, mortality and natality are governed only by natural
stresses and the evolutionary changes in the ecosystems.” It stated that
pecies such as the grizzly, wolf, wolverine, bald eagle, trumpeter swan,
arctic grayling, Kokanee salmon, and peregrine falcon that are extinct,
rare, threatened, or endangered elsewhere, are found in the joint
properties in stable, self-regulating populations. The trumpeter swan
breeding areas are the largest in Alaska and one of three remaining
breeding sites for this species in North America. All forms of herbivorous
animals common to Alaska and northwestern Canada are represented in the
fauna of the joint properties, some in numbers exceeded nowhere else. Over
14,000 Dall sheep, the single largest group in the world, are found on
lands encompassed by the nomination. Some 600 grizzly bears range through
the area, one of the largest protected populations in the world.
In the 1991 nomination of Glacier Bay National Park
and Preserve, the United States argued that Glacier Bay shares and
complements the characteristics and attributes of the original World
Heritage Site. It described the area as a coastal, southward, and seaward
extension of a geological and ecological continuum and argued that the
extension would enhance the representation of later stages of glacial and
ecological succession and provide regional coherence to the existing World
Heritage Site. The World Heritage nomination of Glacier Bay was based on
the significance of the site in providing full coverage of glacial
processes originally justified in the first nomination, as well as related
ecological succession in both terrestrial and coastal/marine environments.
These ongoing successional processes still drive much of the scientific
interest in the park today.
The nomination also
argued that Glacier Bay would add an extensive, intact, and unique
deglaciated fjord marine ecosystem to the existing World Heritage Site.
This ecosystem provides habitat for several marine mammal species,
including the endangered humpback whale and the threatened Steller sea
lion. The humpback whale has been monitored and studied in Glacier Bay for
nearly 30 years, and these studies have provided one of the most extensive
data sets on the species in existence. This major effort has contributed
substantial scientific understanding of the humpback whale’s behavior,
reproductive biology and migratory patterns. The marine environment also
is rich in other wildlife including over 230 species of birds, a like
number of marine fish species, and such large mammals as wolves, bears
(black and brown), moose, and mountain goats.
In
the 1993 nomination of Tatshenshini-Alsek Provincial Wilderness Park,
Canada argued that the addition of Tatshenshini-Alsek would make a vital
connection between the other three units and contains superlative
resources of its own. The Tatshenshini-Alsek Rivers are internationally
acclaimed as being among the world’s most significant wilderness river
systems and are the central and pre-eminent corridor through which one can
easily travel and appreciate the diversity of environments and the
vastness of space which characterize this 8.5 million hectare (21 million
acre) international park area. The Tatshenshini-Alsek River systems are an
essential and unique component of the large ecosystems which the other
national parks and reserves were established to preserve. The
Tatshenshini-Alsek River valleys are pivotal to these regional ecosystems,
since they are one of the only vegetated, low elevation and ice-free
linkages from the coast to the interior, and thus provide an essential
connection for migration of plant and animal species in the entire region.
Examples of the outstanding phenomena within the
Tatshenshini-Alsek Park cited by the nomination include: •
The highest mountain in British Columbia, Mount Fairweather, rising to
4,663 meters. • The largest non-polar ice cap in the world,
over 350 valley glaciers and an estimated 31 surge-type glaciers. • Approximately 200 of the known 400 Dall’s sheep in British
Columbia have their summer and winter range in this area. •
Black bears and the “blue” or “glacier” bear occur. The glacier bear
(Ursus americanus emmonsi) is found nowhere else in the province, or
Canada, and is rare in Alaska.
|
| 2b Criteria for initial
inscription |
| Cultural Criteria: |
| Natural Criteria: |
|
ii |
|
iii |
|
iv |
| 2c Agreed upon Statement of
Significance |
|
No |
| 2c2 Proposed Statement of
Significance |
|
The World Heritage Committee inscribed
the Kluane/Wrangell-St. Elias/Glacier Bay/Tatshenshini-Alsek site on the
World Heritage List based on criteria (ii), (iii) and (iv):
(ii) Ongoing Glacial Processes The
joint Alaskan-Canadian World Heritage Site represents the most extensive
realm of mountains, icefields, and glaciers in North America. The site
contains nine peaks more than 14,000 feet high, four of them rising more
than 16,000 feet. There are uncounted peaks in the 10,000 to 14,000-foot
range. The Malaspina and Nabesna are some of the world’s largest glaciers.
The glaciers generate the two dozen river systems that drain from the
clustered masses of mountains.
(iii) Rare and
Superlative Natural Phenomena This site encompasses the
breadth of active natural processes from tectonic to volcanic to glacial
to fluvial. It contains a diversity and abundance of habitat for wildlife
and fisheries- resident and migratory, marine and terrestrial. The
vegetation zones range from sea level to 5,000 meters.
(iv) Habitats of rare and endangered species This
area of North America contains the largest concentration of Dall sheep in
the world. Populations of bears, wolves, caribou, mountain goats and moose
that are endangered elsewhere are self regulating here. This is one of the
few places in the world where ecological processes such as predation,
migration, mortality and natality are governed by natural stresses and the
evolutionary changes in ecosystems.
(Note: The
Statement of Significance proposed here reflects the definitions and
numbering of the criteria at the time the site was inscribed on the World
Heritage List. Changes in the definitions and numbering of the criteria
since that time will need to be taken into account when officially
submitting a Statement of Significance to the World Heritage Committee for
approval.)
|
| 2d Criteria added after initial
inscription |
|
No |
| |
| 3 STATEMENT OF
AUTHENTICITY/INTEGRITY |
| 3a Initial evaluation of
authenticity/integrity |
|
In the 1979, 1991 and 1993
nominations, Canada and the United States emphasized that the nominated
properties were essentially unmodified wilderness areas, with minimal
development. Traditional activities, such as subsistence hunting, were
taking place in some parts of the nominated properties, but were not a
cause for concern. The nomination of Glacier Bay National Park and
Preserve noted that commercial fishing was taking place in Glacier Bay but
described the process of determining compatibility of this activity with
the purposes and values of the park. The nomination also noted concerns
about possible mining developments in the region. The nomination of
Tatshenshini-Alsek also described some localized impacts from mineral
exploration and extraction but concluded that the vast majority of the
area was in a pristine state.
In 1979, IUCN
concluded that “the vast area of 160,000 sq. km. (of the joint properties)
contains many complete ecosystems that are to a great extent inaccessible
and inhospitable to man. The combined efforts of the US and the Canadian
Governments provide the manpower and resources for effective management
and protection.”
In 1992, IUCN concluded that
“apart from limited commercial and sport fishing activities, all resources
within Glacier Bay National Park are fully protected from consumptive uses
by national legislation. The designation in the management plan of 85 per
cent of the park as a wilderness area reinforces protection and
effectively precludes direct human modification within this zone.
Legislation gives management of the ocean waters and the bottom of the Bay
and the outer coastal fringe to the National Park Service (NPS). This
provision is an unique one and greatly enhances integrity. A small portion
of the nomination is the Glacier Bay National Preserve in the north corner
of the park. This area receives much less protection and is the scene of a
major commercial fishery. Sport hunting is also allowed. Consideration was
given by IUCN to requesting the Dry Bay area to be excluded from the site.
But as the use is seasonal and closely regulated and as the Alsek River
floodplain is integral to the whole unit, its inclusion is still seen as
valuable. Threats to the integrity of the park that are being addressed by
management include: • illegal commercial fishing in
wilderness waters; • the impact of tour boats on wildlife of
Glacier Bay, particularly the humpback whale; • native Huna
Tlingit claims to subsistence harvesting rights within the park; and • existence of a 80 hectares (198 acres) mining claim on the
Brady Ice Field.”
IUCN noted that “Glacier Bay,
however, faces one significant threat”, that being the proposed large
open-pit copper mine on the upper Tatshenshini River, 24 km from the park
boundary.
In 1994 IUCN concluded that “apart
from subsistence fishing and hunting in the upper reaches of the T/A by
the Champagne-Aishihik First Nations, the area is entirely protected from
any consumptive use by Class A Provincial Wilderness park status. Mining
claims which existed in the area prior to its official establishment in
1993 will be extinguished. The major threat from the proposed open pit
mine at Windy Craggy has been removed as the government of British
Columbia opted to give the area park status. Some restoration work needs
to be done to remove evidence of mining exploration activity but over 95
per cent of the total area of the park is wilderness. There are some
recreational use pressures from rafters and kayakers along the river, but
these are being managed by the park services involved. The T/A is only one
year old and the planning for its management hss just commenced. Only two
staff are based in the park on a seasonal basis but this may be sufficient
at this point in time. Finally, the T/A part of the St. Elias unit has
been less intensively studied than the other components but it is expected
that the management plan will identify the areas of research that need
attention.”
|
| 3b Significant changes in
authenticity/integrity |
|
Yes |
| 3b1 Description of changes in
authenticity/integrity |
|
Generally speaking, the World Heritage
Site has better integrity today than previously. Park management plans
have identified a number of resource protection measures to address
internal and external pressures from recreational use inside and/or
adjacent to the World Heritage Site, and from commercial growth and
development outside the World Heritage Site. |
| |
| 4 MANAGEMENT |
| Management Regime |
| 4a Ownership/Management |
|
- Management under protective legislation
- Management under contractual agreement(s)
between State Party and a third party
Description: Kluane National Park and Reserve is managed
under the authority of the Canada National Parks Act and its associated
regulations, and the Parks Canada Agency Act, and according to Parks
Canada's Guiding Principles and Operational Policies. The Canada National
Parks Act can be found at:
http://www.parl.gc.ca/36/2/parlbus/chambus/house/bills/government/C-27/C-27_4/90065bE.html
and
http://www.parl.gc.ca/36/2/parlbus/chambus/house/bills/government/C-27/C-27_4/90065bF.html.
A description of the lands set aside can be found at:
http://laws.justice.gc.ca/en/N-14.01/18439.html#rid-18441 and
http://lois.justice.gc.ca/fr/N-14.01/75951.html#rid-75953.
Wrangell-St.Elias National Park and Preserve was established under the
Alaska Natural Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA) at 5.34 million
hectares (13.2 million acres), with some sections designated as national
preserve and the bulk of the area designated as national park. 3.6 million
hectares (8.9 million acres) of federally designated wilderness was
overlaid on these sections. Both Wrangell-St.Elias National Park and
Preserve and Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve are managed under the
Organic Act "to conserve the scenery and the natural and historic objects
and the wildlife therein and to provide for the enjoyment of the same in
such manner and by such means as will leave them unimpaired for the
enjoyment of future generations." (NPS Organic Act, 1916 - 16 USC 1).
ANILCA may be found at: http://www.r7.fws.gov/asm/anilca/toc.html. The
Organic Act may be found at: http://www.nps.gov/legacy/organic-act.htm.
Both US parks’ designated wilderness lands and waters are also managed
under the Wilderness Act. Wilderness under the act is defined as “…an
area…retaining its primeval character and influence, without permanent
improvements or human habitation….1) affected primarily by the forces of
nature…., 2) has outstanding opportunities for solitude or a primitive and
unconfined type of recreation….” The Wilderness Act can be found at:
http://www.nps.gov/isro/wild_links/FROM_ANN/WILDERNESS%20ACT.htm. Glacier
Bay National Monument was established on February 26, 1925 by proclamation
of Calvin Coolidge (43 Stat 1988) under the Antiquities Act. In 1980, the
ANILCA redesignated the monument as Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve
and extended the boundaries to include the northern end of the Fairweather
Range and adjacent coastal areas. ANILCA also designated most of the park
lands and a portion of the park waters as Wilderness. The Antiquities Act
may be found at: http://www.cr.nps.gov/local-law/anti1906.htm.
Tatshenshini-Alsek Park was established in 1993 by the Province of British
Columbia as a Class A Park under the Park Act by an enactment of the
provincial legislature. It is also protected under the Protected Areas of
British Columbia Act. Parks are managed for important conservation values
and are dedicated for the preservation of their natural environments for
the inspiration, use and enjoyment of the public. |
| 4b Level of authority |
|
National Description: Kluane National Park and Reserve is managed
and owned by the Canadian Federal Government as a National Park.
Wrangell-St. Elias and Glacier Bay National Park and Preserves are managed
by the US National Park Service (NPS) under the US Department of Interior,
a cabinet level agency within the executive branch reporting directly to
the President. Tatshenshini-Alsek Park is managed under the authority of
the Minister of Water, Land and Air Protection (WLAP) of the Province of
British Columbia, Canada. The park is co-managed by the Ministry of WLAP
and the Champagne and Aishihik First Nations. |
| 4c Legal status |
|
Kluane National Park and Reserve is a
Canadian National Park in areas where land claim settlement agreements
have been reached, and a National Park Reserve in areas containing
settlement lands where land claim agreements have not yet been reached.
Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve is a U.S. National Park in
areas where hunting is not allowed and a U.S. National Preserve in areas
where hunting is allowed. Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve is also a
U.S. National Park and Preserve managed under the same provisions.
Tatshenshini-Alsek Park is managed as a Class A Park under the Park Act of
British Columbia. |
| 4d Agency/agencies with management
authority |
|
| Agency Name: |
USNPS Alaska Region |
| Name: |
Blazsak, Marcia |
| Address: |
240 W. 5th Avenue, Room 114 |
| City: |
Anchorage, Alaska |
| Postal Code: |
99501 |
| Telephone: |
907-644-3510 |
| Fax Number: |
|
| Email: |
Marcia_Blazsak@nps.gov | |
|
| Agency Name: |
Kluane National Park &
Reserve |
| Name: |
Marrin, Don |
| Address: |
P.O. Box 5495 |
| City: |
Haines Junction, Yukon
Territory |
| Postal Code: |
Y0B 1L0 |
| Telephone: |
867-634-7250 |
| Fax Number: |
867-634-7208 |
| Email: |
Don.Marrin@pc.gc.ca | |
|
| Agency Name: |
Ministry of Water, Land and
Ai |
| Name: |
Markides, Hugh |
| Address: |
Bag 5000, 3726 Alfred Street |
| City: |
Smithers, BC |
| Postal Code: |
V0J 2N0 |
| Telephone: |
250-847-7321 |
| Fax Number: |
250-847-7728 |
| Email: |
Hugh.Markides@gems3.gov.bc.ca | |
| 4e Protective measures and means of
implementing them |
|
The Canada National Parks Act (2000)
and its associated regulations govern the protection and management of the
cultural and natural resources of Kluane National Park and Reserve. Land
Claim Final Agreements with the Champagne and Aishihik and Kluane First
Nations provide additional direction for the protection and management of
the park and park reserve’s cultural and natural resources.
National park regulations include but are not
necessarily limited to: • aircraft access •
business • camping • fire protection • fishing • general • wildlife
regulations
The Canada National Parks Act
requires that “maintenance or restoration of ecological integrity, through
the protection of natural resources and natural processes, shall be the
first priority of the Minister when considering all aspects of the
management of parks.”
The Parks Canada Agency
Act (1998) established an Agency “for the purpose of ensuring that
Canada’s national parks, national historic sites and related heritage
areas are protected and represented for this and future generations and in
order to further the achievement of the national interest as it is related
to those parks, sites and heritage areas and related programs."
Other laws that apply to Canadian national parks
include: • The Fisheries Act (1985) • The
Canadian Environmental Assessment Act (1992). • The Migratory
Birds Convention Act (1994) • The Species at Risk Act (2002)
Consolidated versions of the Canada National
Parks Act and associated regulations can be found at:
http://laws.justice.gc.ca/en/N-14.01/index.html and
http://lois.justice.gc.ca/fr/N-14.01/index.html
Canadian national parks are also managed according to Parks
Canada's Guiding Principles and Operational Policies.
Wrangell-St. Elias and Glacier Bay National Park and Preserves
are administered under the authority of the Organic Act of August 25, 1916
(39 Stat. 535), which established the United States NPS and which states
that the fundamental purpose of national parks is “…to conserve the
scenery and the natural and historic objects and the wildlife therein and
to provide for the enjoyment of the same in such a manner as by such means
as will leave them unimpaired for the enjoyment of future generations.”
The Organic Act and its associated regulations govern the protection and
management of the cultural and natural resources of the unit.
Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserve was
established under ANILCA at 5.34 hectares (13.2 million acres), with some
sections designated as national preserve and the bulk of the area
designated as national park. 3.6 million hectares (8.9 million acres) of
federally designated wilderness was overlaid on these sections.
Glacier Bay National Monument was established on
February 26, 1925 by proclamation of Calvin Coolidge (43 Stat 1988) under
the Antiquities Act. In 1980, ANILCA redesignated the monument as Glacier
Bay National Park and Preserve and extended the boundaries to include the
northern end of the Fairweather Range and adjacent coastal areas. ANILCA
also designated most of the park lands and a portion of the park waters as
Wilderness.
Management of the properties’
resources is mandated under several additional federal statutes enacted
over the past 80 years: • Wilderness Act •
National Historic Preservation Act • Redwood Act • National Environmental Policy Act • Endangered
Species Act • The National Parks and Recreation Act of 1978
• Marine Mammal Protection Act • National Parks
Omnibus Management Act of 1998
Tatshenshini-Alsek Park was established in 1993 by the Province
of British Columbia as a Class A Park by an enactment of the provincial
legislature. Parks are managed for important conservation values and are
dedicated for the preservation of their natural environments for the
inspiration, use and enjoyment of the public. It is managed under the
following statutes:
• Park Act and regulations
• Protected Areas of BC Act • Wildlife Act
|
| 4f Administrative and management
arrangements |
|
Day-to-day management of Kluane
National Park and Reserve is directed by the Field Unit Superintendent of
the Yukon Field Unit who reports via the Executive Director of Mountain
Parks and the Director General, Western and Northern Canada to the Chief
Executive Officer of the Parks Canada Agency. Management direction for the
park comes from the legislation cited in 4e, as well as from Parks
Canada's Guiding Principles and Operational Policies and the Kluane
National Park and Reserve of Canada Management Plan (2004).
1995, the effective date of the Champagne and
Aishihik First Nations (CAFN) Final Agreement, ushered in a new era in the
management of Kluane National Park. The Final Agreement created a
co-operative management regime based on shared responsibility for managing
park resources by the establishment of the Kluane National Park Management
Board (Board). The Board was expanded in February 2004, when the Kluane
First Nation (KFN) Final Agreement came into effect. The Board’s work
currently relates to the national park and the park reserve.
The Board consists of six voting members; two
nominees of CAFN, two nominees of KFN and two nominees of Canada. All are
appointed by the Minister responsible for the Parks Canada Agency. Parks
Canada is represented on the Board by the Park Superintendent, a
non-voting member. The Board provides a vehicle for public involvement in
park management and may make recommendations to the Minister on any
matters related to management or development in Kluane National Park and
Reserve.
The CAFN and KFN Final Agreements
identify the following objectives for Kluane National Park and Reserve:
• to recognize their history and culture, and
the rights provided for in the agreements, in the planning, management,
administration and operation of the Kluane National Park and Reserve; • to recognize and protect the traditional and current use of the
park by CAFN and KFN in the development and management of Kluane National
Park and Reserve; • to provide economic opportunities to
Champagne and Aishihik and Kluane People in the development, operation and
management of the Kluane National Park and Reserve; • to
recognize that oral history is a valid and relevant form of research for
establishing the historical significance of heritage sites and moveable
heritage resources in Kluane National Park and Reserve directly related to
the history of Champagne and Aishihik, and Kluane People; •
to recognize the interest of Champagne and Aishihik, and Kluane People in
the interpretation of aboriginal place names and heritage resources in
Kluane National Park and Reserve directly related to the culture of CAFN
and KFN; and • to integrate traditional and scientific
knowledge in the management of the natural and cultural resources of
Kluane National Park and Reserve.
Glacier Bay
and Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and Preserves are units of the US
NPS. Day-to-day management is directed by the Park Superintendent who
supervises a staff organized into six divisions (Administration,
Interpretation, Resource Management, Resource Protection, Facility
Management, and Concessions Management). These properties are managed in
accordance with the legislative and regulatory mandates of the US NPS (see
section 4e). Management of the properties is overseen by the Alaska Region
of the US NPS. The Regional Director reports to the National Director for
the US NPS in Washington D.C. who in turn reports to the Secretary of
Interior.
Wrangell-St. Elias National Park and
Preserve has two government-to government agreements with Mentasta and
Cheesh-Na Native Villages a-d is working on a third one. These agreements
outline communication and consultation strategies for cooperative projects
between the NPS and the Ahtna people. Wrangell-St. Elias and Ahtna Inc.
are working on an agreement that would place conservation easements on
Ahtna land with the park boundary. If implemented additional lands could
be protected from logging and mining concerns. Since Ahtna Inc. owns close
to 364,230 hectares (900,000 acres) within the park, this agreement could
have significant positive impacts for resource protection.
Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve also has
established a government-to-government agreement with Native American
(First Nations) stakeholders. As a result of years of strained relations
between NPS and the Hoonah Tlingit over inclusion of the tribal homeland
within Glacier Bay National Park, NPS officials and Tribal government
leaders determined in the mid 1990s to establish better communications and
attempt to address a host of issues. A major outcome was a Memorandum of
Understanding (MOU), signed on September 30, 1995, and effective for five
years, between Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve and the Hoonah
Indian Association. The MOU had several objectives: "to formally recognize
our government-to-government relations and recognize areas of mutual
concern and support, establish a framework for cooperative relationships,
and promote communication between both parties." The Hoonah tribe agreed
to assign a tribal liaison officer, form an advisory board, and consult
with the NPS on matters of common concern and interest. The NPS agreed to
recognize the tribe as a government, assign an NPS liaison officer, and
invite comment from the tribe concerning park operations, planning and
management.
Since that time, the Hoonahs have
discussed with NPS officials a number of subsistence-related concerns—a
cultural fishery program, the gathering of berries and gull eggs, and
other matters—which the agency has accommodated whenever possible, and is
working to resolve where legal barriers exist. The MOU has also resulted
in a proactive program in which NPS staff and the Hoonah Tlingits are
working cooperatively on a host of cultural preservation and education
projects designed to help perpetuate Hoonah Tlingit cultural traditions.
The MOU was updated for an additional five years on September 29, 2000.
Tatshenshini-Alsek Park is managed by the
Tatshenshini Alsek Management Board under authority of the Minister of
Water, Land and Air Protection (WLAP). The Regional Manager for the
Ministry of WLAP is located in Smithers, British Columbia.
|
| 4g Significant changes in management
regime since inscription |
|
Kluane National Park and Reserve and
the adjoining Wrangell-St. Elias National Monument in Alaska were jointly
nominated to the World Heritage List in 1979. Since that time, Glacier Bay
National Park and Preserve (Alaska) and Tatshenshini-Alsek Park (British
Columbia) have been added to the site, creating the Kluane/Wrangell – St.
Elias/Glacier Bay/Tatshenshini – Alsek World Heritage Site. The qualities
that led to the initial nomination are “an unbroken, pristine natural
system with a rich variety of vegetation patterns and ecosystems, a wealth
of wildlife populations including grizzly bears, Dall’s sheep (the largest
single concentration in the world), and a number of rare plant
communities. They also contain the largest non-polar icefield in the world
and some of the world’s most spectacular glaciers.” (from the World
Heritage Site plaque)
In 1998, a five-year MOU
was signed between the US NPS and Parks Canada on co-operation in
management, research, protection, conservation and presentation of
national parks and historic sites. Managers of the four units meet at
least every other year to discuss and plan mutual projects. The
Kluane/Wrangell – St. Elias/Glacier Bay/Tatshenshini – Alsek World
Heritage Site is listed as one of twelve priority areas for possible
collaboration. Potential areas for collaboration include: developing staff
training and exchanges; building inter-agency networks of biologists,
planners, visitor services and interpretation staff; formalizing the
international management of the Tatshenshini-Alsek Rivers; developing a
common base map for the four parks; seeking a moratorium on the forest
clearing of the international boundary in these parks; and updating the
World Heritage Site plaques, including seeking a common name for the World
Heritage Site.
While the five-year MOU may have
expired, it is philosophically still being implemented. Cooperative
projects occur within the various resource management divisions and the
interpretation divisions. Unit Managers have a yearly trip down the
Tatshenshini-Alsek Rivers as well.
In Kluane
National Park and Reserve, a significant change has been the settlement of
the CAFN and KFN land claim agreements. The CAFN agreement established
approximately 5,900 km² of the southeastern portion of the former Kluane
National Park Reserve as Kluane National Park. The northwestern portion of
the Kluane National Park Reserve within the traditional territory of the
Kluane First Nation, also known as the Tachal Region, remains a National
Park Reserve until the overlapping land claim with the White River First
Nation is settled.
When Wrangell-St. Elias was
first designated a World Heritage Site, it was a National Monument. In
1980, a year later ANILCA was passed and Wrangell-St. Elias was designated
a National Park and Preserve. This change in status allowed for both sport
and subsistence hunting; activities that were not permitted under its
Monument status. Other changes included designating most of the park and
preserve as Wilderness.
In Glacier Bay National
Park and Preserve, after years of controversy, commercial fishing in
Glacier Bay began a legislatively mandated phase-out in 1999. Fishing
ended immediately in all park wilderness waters and in the northern arms
of the bay (18 per cent of total park marine waters). Limited fishing will
continue in specified non-wilderness waters within Glacier Bay by
qualified permit holders for their lifetimes only. Fishing in the park in
non-wilderness waters outside of Glacier Bay itself will continue
indefinitely. When the phase-out is completed, about 55 per cent of the
park’s marine waters will be completely closed to commercial fishing. This
will create the largest high-latitude marine reserve in the world.
Prior to the land withdrawal for Glacier Bay
National Monument in 1924, 21 natives of Hoonah, Alaska filed for 65
hectare (160 acres) land allotments under terms of the 1906 Native
Allotment Act within the area that would later become Glacier Bay National
Park and Preserve. Through nearly seven decades of adjudication and legal
challenges, by 1992 four of the prior land claims had been approved and
conveyed to private ownership, while 17 others were still pending.
The NPS, working with the allotment owners, has
developed a strategy in which allotments are purchased and brought back
into the park, while the allottees retain cultural easements (the right to
build a simple shelter and conduct activities compatible with current
regulations). This helps facilitate land transactions and insures that
native peoples retain their cultural connections to the landscape. At the
same time, the potential exists for some future commercial or other uses
on lands within the park that would not necessarily be sanctioned by the
NPS. Efforts to address this potential conflict are ongoing.
The Tatshenshini-Alsek Park Management Board is
fully operational and meets 2-4 times per year. A Management Direction
Statement has been prepared for the park and will guide operations until a
full management plan has been prepared.
|
| 4h Management plan |
|
Yes |
| 4h1 Summary of management
plan |
|
Kluane A park management
plan is required under the Parks Canada Agency Act and Canada National
Parks Act. Over the last several years and following a series of public
consultation meetings, workshops with local students and the CAFN,
stakeholder meetings, and with input from a volunteer working group
established to provide recommendations on the park recreational
opportunities, the 1990 management plan was updated.
Approved by Canada's Minister of the Environment in early 2004,
the updated management provides long-term strategic direction for the
management and operation of Kluane National Park and Reserve. The Park
Superintendent, working cooperatively with the Kluane National Park
Management Board and the Champagne and Aishihik and Kluane First Nations,
is responsible for the implementation of the management plan.
The management plan identifies a number of key
actions related to heritage resource protection and presentation, visitor
services, and management of Parks Canada. These actions fall within eight
general themes related to: • Identifying and protecting
critical wildlife habitat and movement corridors •
Strengthening co-operative management • Working with partners
in the region to maintain a healthy ecosystem • Increasing
ecological integrity monitoring • Assisting local First
Nations to become reacquainted with the park • Offering a
variety of high quality wilderness experiences without impairing
ecological integrity • Expanding interpretation and outreach
services; and • Establishing wilderness area declaration for
Zone I and II areas of the park
Wrangell-St.
Elias The General Management Plan for Wrangell-St. Elias
National Park and Preserve was completed in 1986. The plan and subsequent
action plans fulfill the requirements of ANILCA of 1980, which established
the park and preserve. Major topics covered include: • Land
Protection planning • Natural and Cultural Resources planning
• Backcountry and Wilderness management •
Management zoning • Visitor services •
Commercial services • Access
There
have been two amendments to the General Management Plan: one to cover the
issue of existing mining claims within the park and one to incorporate
Kennecott National Historic Landmark into the park. The plan is available
at: http://www.nps.gov/wrst.
Glacier Bay The General Management Plan for Glacier Bay National Park and
Preserve sets the overall direction for management of natural and cultural
resources, visitor use, land protection, and facility development. The
plan and subsequent action plans fulfill the requirements of ANILCA of
1980, which established the park and preserve. This plan was developed in
accordance with the National Environmental Policy Act, which requires
public participation and review. The main elements of the plan are: • Natural Resource Management • Cultural Resource
Management • Land Protection • Park/Preserve
Boundary Changes • Wilderness Management/Zoning • Private Lands Use and Development • Commercial
Visitor Services • Backcountry Use • Use of
Glacier Bay National Preserve • Vessel Use •
Bartlett Cove Development Concept
The plan is
available at: http://www.nps.gov/glba/pphtml/facts.html.
Tatshenshini-Alsek Park Tatashenshini-Alsek Park is currently managed under an approved
Management Direction Statement pending preparation of a full management
plan. The priority for management of the park is to ensure that its
internationally significant natural, cultural heritage and recreational
values are protected and that ecosystems within the park maintain their
natural function. The direction statement includes principles for
management and priority management objectives and strategies for: •protecting biophysical values •protecting cultural
heritage values •protecting recreation values and managing
for appropriate levels of recreational use •ensuring
environmental protection •resolving non-conforming uses •encouraging public understanding, appreciation and enjoyment •cooperating in identifying and optimizing commercial, economic,
training and employment opportunities for CAFN and •ensuring
coordinated approaches for management with adjacent jurisdictions in
recognition of the World Heritage status.
|
| Financial Resources |
| 4i Annual operating
budget |
|
Kluane: $3 million (USD) Wrangell-St.
Elias: $3 million (USD) Glacier Bay: $ 3.5 million (USD)
Tatshenshini-Alsek $50.0 K (USD) |
| Staffing Levels (Human
Resources) |
| 4j Staffing levels |
|
| Full time: |
0 |
| Part time: |
0 |
| Seasonal: |
0 |
| Other: |
0 |
|
Kluane The staff of
Kluane National Park and Reserve consists of park wardens, finance
and administrative staff, heritage communicators, and visitor
services staff, technical services staff and managers, and
informatics staff. Generally speaking the park warden and heritage
communicator/visitor services staff have science based university
degrees or college diplomas. The technical services staff have
trades diplomas. The breakdown of job categories is as follows:
15 Full-time staff, 2 Part-time staff, 10
Seasonal-staff, 7 Term staff and 2 Summer Student staff.
Wrangell-St. Elias Wrangell-St.
Elias National Park and Preserve has a full-time permanent staff of
approximately 45 people within six divisions: Management and
Administration, Planning and Compliance, Interpretation, Natural and
Cultural Resources, Maintenance, and Resource Protection. During the
field season Wrangell-St. Elias adds almost 100 seasonal employees
of which half are in the Maintenance Division.
Glacier Bay Glacier Bay National Park and
Preserve has a staff of 51 permanent and 48 temporary or term
positions within five divisions, broken down as follows:
Administration 11, Protection 14, Resource Management 26,
Interpretation 19, Maintenance 29
Tatshenshini-Alsek Park The Ministry of Water,
Land and Air Protection has assigned one seasonal employee and
approximately 25 per cent of an Area Supervisor position to park
management.
| |
| Sources of expertise and training in
conservation and management techniques |
| 4k Sources of specialized expertise,
training and services |
|
Kluane Training in
conservation and management for park staff takes place in a variety of
training centres and locations across Canada. A network of professional
and technical expertise ranging from human resource management, finance
and administration, management planning, natural and cultural resource
conservation, heritage presentation, information management and
technology, to engineering and architecture works with Kluane National
Park and Reserve staff to protect and present the parks cultural and
natural resources. These staff can be found in the Yukon Field Unit’s
office in Whitehorse, or in Western Canada Service Centre Offices in
Vancouver, Calgary and Winnipeg.
Glacier Bay and
Wrangell-St Elias A wide array of resource management
training opportunities is available to employees of the NPS. Two training
facilities of note are the Horace M. Albright Training Center in Arizona
and the Arthur Carhart National Wilderness Training Center in Montana. The
Albright Center offers a resource curriculum focussed on developing the
skills necessary to protect and maintain natural resources, including
techniques for resource monitoring, general ecosystem management, and
compliance with the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) and other
environmental laws and policies. The Carhart Center offers training
opportunities designed to foster excellence in wilderness stewardship by
cultivating knowledgeable, skilled and capable wilderness managers.
Another source of conservation expertise, the Aldo Leopold Institute,
conducts research to further develop knowledge required to preserve
wilderness and the ecological and social values derived from wilderness
and similarly managed lands. Results of this research are made available
to NPS employees through a wide variety of venues.
Tatshenshini-Alsek Park The regional office of the
Ministry of Water, Land and Air Protection contains staff with expertise
in park management, planning, fish and wildlife management, recreation
management and habitat management. Other more specialized expertise is
potentially available from headquarters offices in Victoria or on contract
subject to funding.
The Champagne and Aishihik
First Nations has staff expertise in resource management and cultural
resource management which is indirectly available to the management board
through CAFN representatives at the board.
Limited training is available based on need.
|
| Visitation |
| 4l Visitor statistics
available |
|
Yes |
| 4l1 Annual visitation, methodology
and trends |
|
Kluane Visitation to
Kluane is 66,400 person days on average for Backcountry, Visitor Centre
and Campground use combined. Visitation in Kluane is captured through
highway campground use permits, visitor reception centre counts, and
backcountry use permits.
Wrangell-St. Elias Average annual visitation was 40,000 in 2002. This is an increase
from 15,000 in 1982 when the park started keeping statistics. Visitors are
counted through reports of commercial operators, traffic counters on park
roads, visitor and ranger station attendance and employee observations.
These numbers are then extrapolated using a multiplier to estimate
visitors that would not have been counted directly.
Glacier Bay The official visitor count (US
Government Public Use Statistics Office) was 408,143 for 2003. This
compares to the 1992 (year of inscription) official count of 211,424 for
an increase of 66 per cent. Visitors are counted through camper permits,
Alsek River rafting permits, private and charter boat permits, Glacier Bay
Lodge guest lists, and tour boat and cruise ship passenger lists.
Tatshenshini-Alsek Park No
comprehensive visitor statistics are available. However, numbers of
commercial and private rafters are maintained by Glacier Bay National Park
and Preserve. As a rough estimate, 2,000-3,000 people visit the park
annually
|
| 4m Visitor facilities |
|
Kluane The Haines
Junction Visitor Reception Centre (VRC) was built in 1980 to accommodate
visitor reception and park administration. In recent years about 32,000
people visited the Haines Junction VRC annually. The Tachäl Dhäl (Sheep
Mountain) Visitor Reception Centre, located along the Alaska Highway near
the mouth of the Slims River, is open seasonally from mid-May to early
September. It serves as an important day use visitor reception and
overnight hiker registration centre for the north end of the park. A
current average of 21,000 visitors a year pass through this centre.
Kathleen Lake is Kluane’s focal point for highway
accessible water based recreation and vehicle camping. The 40-site
campground and day use areas provide easily accessible day and overnight
recreation. The Kathleen Lake campground receives an average of just over
1,500 parties per year. The King’s Throne and Kathleen Lake shoreline
trail are two of the most popular day use trails in the park.
About 200 km (124 miles) of trails and 400 km (249
miles) of recognized hiking routes are found in Kluane. Trails are
generally well defined with signs, posts, trailheads and obvious walking
surfaces for the most part found on old mining roads and trails built
prior to park establishment. Trails range from easy twenty- minute walks
to more difficult five-to six-day hikes. Some trails, such as the
Cottonwood, have become more difficult in recent years because of bridge
washouts, campsite closures and the change to designated campsites. In
contrast to trails, routes typically follow no formal path and are not
maintained by the park. They follow streambeds and river channels, alpine
meadows and ridgelines, game trails, and occasionally old mining roads.
Routes are generally longer and more challenging than the park’s trails.
Wrangell-St. Elias The Wrangell-St.
Elias Visitor Center is located in Copper Center, Alaska and consists of a
suite of buildings, and includes a comfort station, theater, exhibit,
visitor contact facility, Alaska Natural History Association (ANHA)
bookstore, community meeting space, and walking trails. A museum for Ahtna
Heritage is planned.
Ranger Stations and visitor
contact stations are located in Slana, Chitina, McCarthy, Kennecott and
Yakutat. These five stations provide visitor information and interpretive
programs, ANHA bookstore, off-road vehicles (ORV) permits, hunting
permits, and emergency services.
There are 17
hunting guide concessionaires consisting of between 65 and 75 operators
that provide a variety of services including air transportation,
flightseeing, mountain climbing, river rafting, backcountry guiding, and
historical tours of Kennecott National Landmark.
Glacier Bay The Glacier Bay Visitor Center is
located on the second floor of the Glacier Bay Lodge in Bartlett Cove. It
has an information desk, an ANHA book store, and an auditorium. Exhibits
that explore the park's natural and cultural history are available in the
Visitor Center as well. Daily throughout the summer, park rangers present
evening programs, show educational videos in the Visitor Center auditorium
and lead walks in the area.
The Visitor
Information Station offers information, permits and orientations for
campers and recreational boaters in the park. Maps and nautical charts are
available there as well.
The Glacier Bay Lodge
offers overnight accommodations, a restaurant, gift shop, and fuel sales.
The Glacier Bay Lodge operates a daily tour boat trip into the bay during
the summer months. The lodge also offers a camper/kayaker drop-off service
at designated locations in the bay.
Various
large cruise ship and tour boat companies bring visitors into the park.
Park rangers provide a public address commentary, slide program and
children's program on board tour boats and cruise ships entering Glacier
Bay.
Guided kayak adventures and kayak rentals
are available. There are guided kayak trips in Glacier Bay and guided raft
trips down the Alsek River. Hunting and fishing guides are available in
Glacier bay National Preserve, where such activities are authorized.
The only developed trails in Glacier Bay National
Park are in the Bartlett Cove region: the Forest Loop Trail, Bartlett
River Trail, and Bartlett Lake Trail. These trails enable visitors to
explore the rain forest environment typical in lower Glacier Bay. The
Forest Loop Trail is handicapped accessible (boardwalk) along a portion of
its length.
Tatshenshini-Alsek Park There are no visitor facilities in the park other than a few
rustic trails consistent with the wilderness nature of the park. The
Ministry of Water, Land and Air Protection has a small display at the
Parks Canada Visitor Centre.
|
| 4n Tourism/visitor management
plan |
|
Yes |
| 4n1 Summary of tourism/visitor
management plan |
|
Kluane The new park
management plan directs the park to work with others to ensure visitors
arrive at the park with expectations appropriate to the visitor experience
objectives identified for the major geographic areas of the park.
Sustainability underlies Kluane National Park and Reserve’s heritage
tourism goal. For Kluane, sustainability means offering a range of
opportunities that highlight the unique features and nature of the park
without impairing its ecological integrity, damaging its cultural
resources or diminishing its wilderness character. Kluane National Park
and Reserve will work with the Champagne and Aishihik First Nations and
Kluane First Nation, their World Heritage Site partners, and stakeholders
such as the tourism industry to “attract park visitors to the right place,
at the right time, in the right numbers and with the right expectations.”
The new management plan for Kluane National Park
and Reserve calls for the park to expand its image beyond the premier
wilderness recreation destination that has been promoted for more than
twenty-five years. "Kluane Wilderness" –the wilderness park of hikers and
mountaineers – will continue to be the primary recreational/visitor
service offered, but new images of "Kluane Waterways", "Kluane Culture",
and "Kluane Winter" will appear in visitor information media produced by
the park.
"Kluane Waterways" will create
awareness that there are significant opportunities for high quality
water-based wilderness and semi-wilderness experiences in the park via the
Alsek Canadian Heritage River, Kathleen and Louise Lakes, and the Mush and
Bates Lakes system. "Kluane Culture" will develop public awareness of
Kluane National Park and Reserve as part of the Southern Tutchone
traditional territories. First Nations cultural interpretation programs
and guided trips will feature prominently in the recreational/visitor
service offer. The park image will reflect First Nations’ role in park
establishment and management. Profiling the Southern Tutchone language in
park materials and using Southern Tutchone place names will communicate
the long aboriginal association with the regional landscape. "Kluane
Winter" will reflect the variety of visitor opportunities that the park
offers during the winter when cross-country skiing on groomed trails, ice
fishing on Kathleen Lake, backcountry ski touring, dog sledding and winter
camping activities are all available.
Wrangell-St. Elias There have been no park specific
visitor management plans since inscription. However, there has been
considerable data collection that characterizes site visitors and informs
us as to where they go within the site and what activities they engage in
while there. In October of 2002, the site initiated a backcountry
management planning process which provides guidance on visitor use in most
of the unit. Additionally, the unit staff works closely with state and
local entities to characterize and anticipate present and future visitor
opportunities and services.
Glacier Bay A vessel permit system has regulated the number of entries into
Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve for cruise ships, tour vessels,
charter vessels, and private vessels since 1985. Regulations establishing
a new vessel quota system, operating requirements, special use areas and
mitigation measures were finalized in May 1996 (36 CFR 13.65) based on a
vessel management plan and environmental assessment finalized in March
1996. The plan was recently redone as an environmental impact statement
and was completed in January 2004. New regulations, which include a modest
increase in cruise ship numbers, will be published in late 2004.
The park has an existing Wilderness Visitor Use
Management Plan that was approved in 1989, tiered off the park’s General
Management Plan. The plan covers visitor-use activities in the park’s
backcountry, which includes the congressionally designated wilderness
lands and wilderness waters. There are two major zone types described in
the Plan; 1) the “threshold” zone is within a one-mile radius of a camper
drop-off point and 2) the “pristine” zone includes all other areas
excluding the Bartlett Cove developed area. Desired resource and social
conditions are described for each zone.
There is
a general recognition that the plan is outdated, and a comprehensive
backcountry management planning process is currently underway as part of a
planning effort that will include the entire Alaska Region of the NPS.
Tatshenshini-Alsek Park There is
currently no formal approved visitor or tourism management
plan. |
| Scientific studies |
| 4o Key scientific studies and
research programmes |
|
The parks which constitute the World
Heritage Site have been the focus of much scientific research over the
past century or more. Below are listed the major research efforts that are
ongoing. Many of these are related directly to the management needs of the
various properties.
Kluane •
Grizzly bear monitoring and research programs • Risk
Assessments of Bear-Human Conflicts at Campsites and along Trails and
Routes. • Cumulative effects assessments •
Visitor use monitoring • Visitor satisfaction and wilderness
experience surveys • Campsite impact monitoring and
assessments • Spruce bark beetle research and monitoring • Long-term monitoring surveys of Dall sheep, mountain goat,
moose and Kokanee salmon populations • Breeding bird surveys
• Monitoring of a variety of ecological components (i.e.
snowshoe hare, furbearer populations, spruce cones, soapberries, forest
mushrooms etc) in conjunction with the Arctic Institute Research Station
• Fire history • Water quality monitoring • Oral history program • Archaeology and cultural
resource inventories • Ice patch research •
Glaciology research and monitoring program • Rare plant
species at risk inventories
Many of the
monitoring components listed above have been amalgamated into a over
arching monitoring program entitled the Kluane Ecological Monitoring
Project (KEMP), a partnership between researchers at the Arctic Institute
Research Station at Kluane Lake, Parks Canada, Yukon Territorial
Government Environment, the Canadian Wildlife Service and Yukon College.
Wrangell-St. Elias • Physical
Science: * Monitoring of Bering, Coastal, Hubbard, Russell
and Root Glaciers * Mt. Wrangell volcanic field hazards and
seismic monitoring * Geologic history of Chugach, Wrangell,
Nabesna, St. Elias and Coastal Mountain Ranges
•
Vegetation: * Monitoring and Assessment of Off-Road Vehicle
(ORV) Use in the Nabesna District * Comparison of natural and
geosynthetic materials for surface hardening of ORV trails *
Baselines for moss, lichen, spruce and surface soils within the park * Vegetation assessment of grazing allotments *
Spruce bark beetle assessment and monitoring * Floristic
inventory of vascular plants in all major mountain ranges within the park
* Fire history for vegetative zones of the park
• Wildlife: * Small mammal inventory
* Freshwater fish inventory of park lakes and rivers * Wolf distribution and monitoring * Moose
distribution and monitoring * Breeding bird monitoring * Dall Sheep population and distribution surveys *
Bald eagle productivity * Mentasta and Chisana Caribou
Population Assessment
• Cultural: *
Kennecott National Historic Landmark Cultural Landscape Report * Chisana Mining District Cultural Landscape Report * Bremner Mining District Cultural Landscape Report * Archeological survey of high visitor use areas *
Cultural History of Ahtna Villages * Customary and
Traditional Uses of Park * Subsistence resources studies
Glacier Bay • Marine Ecosystem: * Testing the Effectiveness of Marine Reserves *
Ecological Effects of Sea Otter Recolonization *
Inventory/Monitoring of Shallow Subtidal * Fjord
Oceanographic Processes in Glacier Bay * Ecology of Selected
Marine Communities in Glacier Bay * Marine and Estuarine Fish
Inventory
• Marine Mammals and Birds: * Humpback Whale Monitoring Program * Harbor Seal
Monitoring Program * Steller Sea Lion Monitoring Program * Harbor Seal/Vessel Interaction Study * Steller Sea
Lion/Vessel Interaction Study * Acoustics Monitoring/Research
* Marine Predator Distribution & Abundance *
Opportunistic Marine Mammal Sightings in Glacier Bay and Icy Strait * Kittlitz’s Murrelet Distribution and Abundance *
Shoreline Nesting Bird Distribution and Abundance *
Black-legged Kittiwake Abundance and Productivity
• Air Quality: * Stack Emissions Modeling
Climatological Monitoring * Visitor Experience/Satisfaction:
*Visitor Use - Annual Numbers *Visitor/Vessel
Distribution *Visitor Survey *Backcountry
visitor survey
• Shoreline Impacts: * Coastal Mapping/Inventory * Wilderness Camping
Impacts Assessment * Coastal Monitoring Protocol Development
* Impact Study of Vessel Effects
•
Cultural Resources: * Ethnographic Overview *
Systemwide Archaeological Inventory * Cultural and
Ethnographic Studies * Maritime Anthropology - Commercial
Fishing History
Tatshenshini-Alsek Park There have been relatively few scientific studies and research
programs in the park. These are noted below. •
Tatshenshini-Alsek River Use Study • Tatshenshini-Alsek Park
Background Study – Draft • Interim Report on
Tatshenshini/Alsek Land Use • Tatshenshini-Alsek Region
Wilderness Study • Tatshenshini-Alsek Rivers Recreation
Corridor Assessment • Risk Assessment of Bear-Human
Interaction at Campsites on the Tatshenshini River and Lower Alsek River
Recently, however, there has been considerable
research related to Kwaday dan Tsinchi (long ago found person) whose
remains were found in a receding glacier several years ago. Information on
the research may be obtained through the Champagne and Aishihik First
Nation.
|
| 4o1 Use of results of scientific
studies and research programmes |
|
In the four units of the World
Heritage Site, research and monitoring programs play an important role in
recreational use management and decision making. They have also been used
to identify indicators and targets/standards for ecological integrity and
wilderness character. The four units have a long and rich history of
scientific research. The enabling legislation for some of the units
specifically cites the “unique opportunity” for scientific research, and
park management has incorporated research into all management decisions
when appropriate. Some examples include: research on mitigation for trails
used by all-terrain vehicles (ATVs) at Wrangell-St. Elias which resulted
in development of new techniques to repair areas of heavily disturbed
tundra. At Glacier Bay, it has incorporated the latest scientific research
into its vessel management planning effort. The studies for
Tatshenshini-Alsek Park have provided valuable information to support
preparation of management strategies. Reports on Kwaday dan Tsinchi have
provided valuable information on cultural, genetic and environmental
topics from some 400-500 years ago. |
| 4o2 Role of WHS designation in design
of scientific studies and research programmes |
|
The four units' research and
monitoring programs largely reflect the natural values for which the
properties were nominated as a World Heritage Site, i.e. monitoring of
Dall sheep populations, grizzly bear research and monitoring efforts.
World Heritage Site designation has prompted cross-boundary studies on
such migratory species as caribou. Additionally, each unit shares its
research results with its neighbors. |
| Education, Information and Awareness
Building |
| 4p WHS plaque |
|
Yes |
| 4q Use of WHC logo |
|
No |
| 4r Educational programmes for
schools |
|
Yes |
| 4r1 Description of educational
programmes for schools |
|
Three of the four units that
constitute the World Heritage Site offer school programs. Below are some
examples:
Kluane provides on-site school
programs on some of the natural values (i.e. bear research) for which the
site was nominated.
Wrangell-St. Elias has
implemented an educational mission through collaboration with a number of
partners: the Wrangell Mountains Center, Copper Basin School District,
Wrangell Institute for Science and the Environment, Prince William Sound
Community College, Mount Sanford Tribal Consortium, and Gateway School
District. Educational programs run the gamut from a wide variety of
natural resource topics to a selection of cultural resource topics in
cooperation with the First Nations partners.
Glacier Bay has a very active student program involving both
visiting youth as well as area schools. Park staff offer a weekly series
of presentations to students at Gustavus School. Facilitated by the
Division of Interpretation, the series features NPS staff from all
divisions who speak to the students on a wide range of topics, from park
planning, to bears, to construction, to oil spill clean-up. They also
share their backgrounds, education and experiences so students could see
how they, too, might pursue a job in national parks.
Each year the park sponsors an overnight culture camp experience
into Glacier Bay National Park for students from the predominantly native
Alaskan village of Hoonah. Using park chartered vessels as a “moving
classroom,” the group travels to cultural sites of high significance to
the clans of Glacier Bay. Elders teach the students Tlingit cultural
skills including stories, songs, art, subsistence gathering and language.
Students also use the Huna Tlingit Talking Map, a computer-based
multi-media geographic learning tool that contains over 200 traditional
names and detailed ethnographic information for locations throughout
Glacier Bay.
Children traveling through Bartlett
Cove can visit the ranger at the information desk in the visitor center to
pick up a free Junior Ranger booklet, which contains age-appropriate
material on national park values and ideals. Children's centers aboard
cruise ships that visit the bay offer a Glacier Bay Junior Ranger Program
to children over the course of the cruise. During the trip through the
bay, park rangers present a special children's program to aspiring Junior
Rangers.
|
| 4s Special events and
exhibitions |
|
Yes |
| 4s1 Description of special events and
exhibitions |
|
A variety of campfire talks, guided
walks and hikes, and audio-visual programs are provided at Kluane National
Park and Reserve. Topics covered reflect the site's natural and cultural
values and range from glaciation, Dall sheep, bears, and ecology to
Southern Tutchone lifestyle, traditional knowledge and Ice Patch research.
Educational films are shown every day in the
Visitor Center auditorium at Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve, and
every night park rangers present a 30-minute slide program on an aspect of
Glacier Bay’s natural or cultural history. A ranger led walk is conducted
daily on a one-mile loop trail that winds through the rainforest in
Bartlett Cove. The visitor center contains a variety of exhibits that
explore the wonders of Glacier Bay.
|
| 4t Facilities, visitor center, site
museum, trails, guides, information materials |
|
The four units of the World Heritage
Site have a variety of interpretive and educational materials available at
their facilities. For example:
Kluane has
Visitor Reception Centers at the main park administrative center in Haines
Junction and near the base of Tachäl Dhäl (Sheep Mountain) along the
Alaska Highway near Slims River which all contain exhibits and other
educational material. A variety of interpretive signage can be found at
the Kathleen Lake day use and 40-site campground area. The World Heritage
Site plaque is found along the Haines Road at the Kathleen Lake overview
highway pull-off. The World Heritage Convention logo is used on Kluane
National Park and Reserve's main park brochure.
Wrangell-St. Elias National Park's new Visitor Center is the main
location for visitor orientation and distribution of educational materials
and issuance of permits needed to harvest park resources. These same
services are also provided at District Ranger Stations as well. A new
museum will be built at the visitor center site that will interpret Ahtna
heritage. Currently there is a park movie, "Crown of the Continent," that
provides a bird’s eye view of the park, and the exhibit building's themes
include glaciology, tectonics and plant and animal adaptation to harsh
environments. Exhibits are planned for the Kennecott National Historic
Landmark after appropriate stabilization of a structure is completed.
Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve's Visitor
Information Station near the dock offers information, permits and
orientations for campers and recreational boaters in the park. Maps and
nautical charts are available as well. The information desk at the Visitor
Center in the lodge is open daily as well, and a ranger is available to
answer questions. Books and maps are available for purchase and free
brochures may also be obtained.
For
Tatshenshini-Alsek Park, a small display is housed in conjunction with the
Kluane National Park Visitor Center. Basic information on the park is
contained on the Ministry of Water, Land and Air Protection's website
including information on a number of trails existing along the Haines
Road.
|
| 4u Role of WHS designation in
education, information and awareness building activities |
|
The management plans of the four units
reflect the importance of safeguarding and communicating the natural
values that led to inscription of Kluane/Wrangell-St.Elias/Glacier
Bay/Tatshenshini-Alsek as a World Heritage Site. Updating the World
Heritage Site plaque, seeking a common name for the World Heritage Site,
developing a common base map for the four parks, and seeking a moratorium
on the clearing of international boundary in these parks are some of the
collaborative actions that have been discussed between the inter-agency
World Heritage Site site managers. However, to date, little effort has
been made to capitalize on the World Heritage Site designation in the way
of educational programs, special events, exhibitions etc. |
| |
| 5 FACTORS AFFECTING THE
PROPERTY |
| 5a Development Pressures |
|
Development-related pressures that
could impact the site as a whole include: • increased
development along highways and outside local communities leading to
habitat fragmentation and loss (e.g., incremental development in the
valley bottoms) • degradation of water quality •
forest harvesting, agriculture and mining operations outside the park • effects from the lack of integrated land use planning (e.g., no
forest management plan for the region) • impacts on wildlife
species of solid waste management outside the park • invasive
exotic vegetation
Glacier Bay National Park and
Preserve with its marine resources has the following specific concerns:
Given the vast biomass removed annually from poorly known
marine ecosystems, direct and indirect effects of commercial and sport
fishing are likely occurring. Commercial fishing, principally for salmon,
Tanner crab and halibut, removes as much as half a million pounds of
biomass from Glacier Bay proper’s marine waters annually. This removal of
biomass has poorly known but likely important effects on marine
ecosystems, including associated nearshore and riparian habitats.
Regulations affecting commercial fisheries in Glacier Bay limit the types
of allowed fisheries and the number of participants. As a result of
recently legislated phaseout, commercial fishing within the bay is
anticipated to cease within the next four decades.
The establishment of Tatshenshini-Alsek Park precluded a major
mine development,the Windy Craggy Mine, from proceeding. This mine was
considered to pose unacceptable risk to the region. Previous mineral
development and a pipeline adjacent to the Haines Road have left
environmental liabilities which are being monitored.
As human populations increase in the area surrounding the World
Heritage Site, the development pressures will tend to increase. The four
units comprising the site all work extensively with the local communities
on various planning projects to minimize these impacts.
|
| 5b Environmental
Pressures |
|
Environmental pressures on the
property occur on both a global and regional scale.
Global level stressors include: • large-scale
effects of global climate change (e.g., rapid wasting of glaciers and the
melting of permafrost soils. Ozone depletion in the stratosphere and
increases in greenhouse gasses have been shown to effect atmospheric
change with subsequent effects on marine ecosystems. Global warming may
alter ocean circulation and upwelling, affect rainfall patterns and storm
tracks and melt glacial ice, ultimately resulting in elevated sea levels)
• long-range transportation of pollutants and the
concentration of these toxins in cold northern environments
Regional level stressors include: •
impacts of wolf management programs • effects of fire
suppression (e.g., disruption of natural forest fire regime) • effects of hunting outside the park (e.g., harvesting
transboundary wildlife populations)
Water
quality degradation stemming from sources outside the park -both global
and regional - will have an effect on overall water quality within park
boundaries.
While managers at the World Heritage
Site may not be able to directly influence change within global level
stressors, they do work cooperatively with sister agencies to minimize
impacts on the regional level. The managers have entered into numerous
agreements with regional partners to address these issues.
|
| 5c Natural Disasters and
Preparedness |
|
Permanent damage to the property from
natural disasters is not considered a threat. Frequent perturbations by
natural forces are in fact considered to be within the normal range of
influences on these wilderness areas and adaptation to natural events both
large and small is continually occurring. This adaptation to natural
change and its scientific value for study are considered to be among the
site’s premier heritage values as described in the original justification
for inscription.
However, with active volcanoes
within the park and frequent earthquakes, there are issues in terms of
visitor and resident safety. Considering the size and remoteness of the
area, risk would be considered minimal.
|
| 5d Visitor/Tourism
Pressures |
|
Described below are some specific
examples of pressures facing specific units of the site:
Kluane Visitor use of Kluane National Park and
Reserve has leveled off over the last five years. Park level stressors
include: • Impacts of recreational use in the backcountry
(e.g., A’äy Chù’ (Slims River) drainage and Alsek River Valley) • Impacts of aircraft flyovers and landings on energy budgets of
wildlife • Displacement of regional First Nations from their
traditional lands • Erosion of traditional knowledge base
within the regional First Nations • Effects of sport fishing
on aquatic ecosystems (e.g., harvest levels at Kathleen Lake) • Impacts from the use of pack animals in the backcountry • Displacement of wildlife by humans (e.g., grizzly bears) • Impacts from the use of snowmobiles and all-terrain vehicles
(ATVs)
Wrangell-St. Elias Use of
ATVs and snowmachines for access within Wrangell-St. Elias National Park
and Preserve for traditional and recreational activities has the potential
to negatively impact park resources and affect visitor experience. As
technology advances such vehicles venture into areas of the park that
haven’t previously seen such use, with the potential to impact wildlife
and other park resources.
Glacier Bay Direct habitat alteration is currently relatively minor and is
limited both temporally and spatially. Vessels emit underwater noise,
periodically leak pollutants, and mix stratified waters. Although vessel
noise, periodic small-scale leaks and spills, and mixing effects may be
chronic in nature, they are typically spatially and temporally isolated to
specific access corridor areas and seasons. Some of the issues that park
managers are monitoring include: • The effects of vessel
traffic on feeding, breeding and molting birdlife and marine mammals,
either through disturbance or direct strikes • The impact of
shoreline camping on nesting birds • Disruption of wildlife
travel patterns by human presence on the shoreline • The
effect of flightseeing aircraft overflights on wildlife and the visitor
experience
Tatshenshini-Alsek Park Generally visitor use is low. Nodes of use occur along the Haines
Road and at wilderness campsites along the Tatshenshini-Alsek Rivers. For
the former, management guidelines and no trace camping rules are in place.
One area of concern is increased snowmobile use at the Haines summit area
and guidelines are being developed and implemented to minimize
environmental and other impacts.
Commercial
aircraft landings and use are controlled. There is some conflict between
river rafters and aircraft overflights.
|
| 5e Number of inhabitants within
property, buffer zone |
|
Kluane Approximately
1,000 to 1,200 people reside in the surrounding area outside the park and
reserve in the villages of Haines Junction, Lù Gha/Klukshu, Destruction
Bay, Burwash and Beaver Creek.
Wrangell-St.
Elias Approximately 200 people live within the park on park
inholdings and 300 along the park boundary.
Glacier Bay The newly incorporated town of Gustavus
adjacent to the park boundary has approximately 400 year-round residents.
Population is thought to double during the summer months. There are no
inhabited inholdings within the boundary of the national park section of
Glacier Bay. However, there are several permitted fishing camps and
hunting/fishing lodges within the preserve portion of the park and
preserve. This population has fallen drastically in recent years as
fishing closures have occurred due to poor returns of salmon stocks.
Currently the preserve would have a fluctuating summer population that
would average approximately 30 persons, including lodge employees and
fishermen.
Tatshenshini-Alsek Park There are 5 cabins near Blanchard Creek along the Haines Road
with 4-8 mostly part-time residents.
These
residents residing both inside and adjacent to the site are not
significantly impacting the site with respect to its original World
Heritage Site values.
|
| 5f Other |
|
Kluane National Park and Reserve:
Cultural Reintegration The Southern Tutchone have a
long-standing relationship with the land. For thousands of years they have
been an integral part of the greater Kluane ecosystem. Kluane National
Park and Reserve forms part of their cultural landscape. The traditional
knowledge that arises out of the Southern Tutchone relationship to the
land contributes to the maintenance of ecological integrity and
contributes to the modern day management of the park. Unfortunately, the
exclusion of Aboriginal People from the park from the mid to late 20th
century has had negative consequences not only on the park’s ecological
health, but also on First Nations cultures. As a result of not being able
to use the park, traditional knowledge of the park lands and resources and
their people’s history in this area could not be passed on through
community members.
Kluane National Park and
Reserve’s new park management plan calls for the sustainable relationship
that Southern Tutchone have had with the lands within the park to be
re-established and fostered. It calls for activities that enhance and pass
on traditional knowledge within the local First Nations communities to be
encouraged so that local First Nations once again use the park as part of
their traditional lands. Such programs will contribute to the ecological
health of the park. They will also provide us a more comprehensive
knowledge and understanding of the World Heritage values of the park.
The plan calls for the Kluane National Park and
Reserve to: 1. Work with Champagne and Aishihik First Nations
and Kluane First Nation to establish programs that enable First Nations
members to become re-acquainted with their cultural heritage in the park
(e.g., culture camps, participation in wildlife surveys), and to convey
this knowledge to members of their communities. 2. Work with
Champagne and Aishihik First Nations and Kluane First Nation to develop
and deliver programs (e.g., workshops, spending time on the land with
elders) that assist park staff and others to understand how First Nations
traditional knowledge and ties to the land contribute to the maintenance
of ecological integrity. 3. Establish guidelines to ensure
that park research and management programs are used as opportunities to
familiarize local First Nations’ members with the park’s plant and animal
communities. 4. Support local First Nations in the
development and delivery of educational programs to First Nation members
that focus on land-based aspects of Southern Tutchone culture (e.g.,
educational trap line).
The absence of the
Southern Tutchone from their traditional lands for this period of time has
meant the loss of traditional ecological knowledge about Kluane National
Park and Reserve natural resources. Managers have not had the benefit of
traditional knowledge in developing their management strategies. Kluane
National Park and Reserve has secured additional ecological integrity
funding of $1.3 million dollars over four years to reintegrate the
Champagne and Aishihik and Kluane First Nations into the park, and to
implement the management plan actions listed above.
|
| |
| 6 MONITORING |
| Administrative arrangements for
monitoring property |
| 6a Formal monitoring
programme |
|
Yes |
| 6a1 Description of formal monitoring
programme |
|
The NPS and Parks Canada are in the
process of implementing long-term ecological monitoring programs (e.g. the
Kluane Ecological Monitoring Project) to continuously monitor the health
of park ecosystems. These programs (called Vital Signs in the U.S.) are in
the early stages of a planning process that will determine the key
indicators that are to be monitored in each park. After the process is
complete, the second phase will involve the scientific design of each
park’s individual monitoring program. These long-term monitoring programs
will be designed to efficiently and effectively monitor ecosystem status
and trends over time at various spatial scales. As trends are determined,
geographic information systems and other tools needed to apply field data
will be used to aid park managers in identifying alternative courses of
management actions. When fully operational, monitoring programs will
provide important feedback between natural resource condition and
management objectives, which can serve both to trigger management actions
and to evaluate managerial effectiveness.
An
example of such a monitoring program being designed and developed is for
the Kokanee Salmon at Sockeye Lake in Kluane. The long term average annual
spawning count minus or plus its standard deviation is used as an
indicator that a population may require further attention or
investigation. When the long term Kokanee salmon spawning count dropped
below it’s target threshold range (2678 + 1171) for two successive years,
a multi-stakeholder research investigation was launched to determine what
was causing the low count, and to determine what if any corrective
management actions i.e. moratorium on Kokanee fishing are needed to
address this issue.
There are no general
environmental programmes in place or contemplated for Tatshenshini-Alsek
Park. Specific environmental monitoring occurs for trails, wilderness
campsites, mining sites (Windy Craggy) and pipeline sites (Rainy Hollow).
|
| Key indicators for measuring state of
conservation |
| 6b Agreed upon key
indicators |
|
No |
| 6b2 Future development of key
indicators |
|
As US NPS and Parks Canada develop and
implement their programs, site managers will meet to decide if sufficient
overlaps occurs to warrant consolidation of effort. Certainly
Tatshenshini-Alsek Park managers would be included in the effort and
perhaps the other units could assist them in implementing a combined
program.
There is no current plan to develop
indicators specifically for the recognized World Heritage values.
Development of the monitoring programs described in 6a will be
sufficient. |
| Results of previous reporting
exercises |
| 6c State Party actions in response to
World Heritage Committee recommendations |
|
Upon the inscription of Glacier Bay
into the existing Kluane/Wrangell-St. Elias Site, the Committee encouraged
the two States Parties to consider linking the Glacier Bay unit with the
Kluane/Wrangell-St. Elias unit; specifically, the Committee urged the
American authorities to consider adding the "Tongass National Forest
Wilderness" and the Canadian authorities to establish and incorporate a
new protected area within the Haines Triangle. The Committee also
requested the Canadian and American authorities to propose a new name such
as "St. Elias Mountain Parks" for the transfrontier World Heritage
property. The Committee also expressed serious concerns over the prospect
of potential impacts to the site of the proposal to exploit the
Windy-Craggy mine in Canada.
Though it is not
stated in the minutes which “Tongass National Forest Wilderness” was being
referred to, it would presumably be the adjacent Russell Fjord Wilderness.
To date, no action has been taken to include any portion of the Tongass
National Forest in the World Heritage Site. Such an action seems unlikely
at present.
In 1993, the Canadian authorities
designated a new protected area, the Tatshenshini-Alsek Park, which was
incorporated into the World heritage Site in 1994. This park links the
World Heritage Site units by connecting Glacier Bay National Park to
Kluane National Park via a new protected area within the Haines Triangle,
as per the Committee's request. The incorporation of this property into
protected status along with the World Heritage Site designation also ended
the Windy-Craggy mine concern, as the mine property was bought by the
British Columbia provincial government as part of the new park’s creation.
The status of the name change request is less
clear. Although some references are now made to the site as “St. Elias
Mountain Parks,” no action has been taken to formally change the name.
|
| |
| 7 CONCLUSIONS |
| World Heritage Values |
| 7a Main conclusions regarding the
state of the properties World Heritage Values |
|
The combined Canadian-American World
Heritage Site continues to retain and protect the values for which it was
designated. Changes since inscription have largely been positive and have
improved the values for which it was designated. Some key examples are:
• Three of the four units have management plans in place • The site as a whole retains its wilderness values and character
• There has been considerable progress with
government-to-government agreements with First Nations and Native Alaskans
• Commercial fishing in Glacier Bay is being phased out • Ecological processes are functioning naturally within intact
ecosystems • Measures are being implemented to re-establish
First Nations connection to the land
|
| Management and factors affecting
site |
| 7b Main conclusions regarding the
management of and factors affecting the property |
|
The unit managers comprising the World
Heritage Site meet on a regular basis and work toward establishing a
common set of objectives by which they can manage as cooperatively as
possible. All the units are working on specific plans that tie to their
management plans that will address ways to minimize various impacts. These
include plans for vessel management, backcountry and wilderness management
and commercial services. These plans and associated management policies
will lead to a set of guiding principles for overall site management.
Additionally, an extensive research program provides managers with the
best information for their decision making. The managers of the site have
been able to achieve partnership relationships with local groups for the
judicious use of park resources in a traditional manner.
Re-establishment of the sustainable relationship that Southern
Tuchtone had with the lands within Kluane National Park and Reserve
through the use of Aboriginal place names, cultural camps, spending time
on the land with First Nations elders, and other activities that encourage
First Nations to use the park as part of their traditional territory will
contribute to the ecological health of the park and the World Heritage
Site. Re-establishment of and use of First Nation knowledge as an integral
part of the resource management process will contribute to the ecological
health of the park and World Heritage Site, and provide park managers a
better understanding of the recognized World Heritage values. |
| Proposed Future Action(s) |
| 7c Approved future
actions |
|
The managers of the World eritage Site
plan to further the maintenance and protection of the joint properties in
the following ways: • Continue exploring and participating in
collaborative training exercises and exchanges where possible, i.e.
continued joint raft training exercises, collaborative natural and
cultural resource management workshops; • Continue to develop
and build their inter-agency network of biologists, planners, visitor
services, cultural resource management, and interpretive staff
specialists; • Continue to seek opportunities to formalize
the international management of the Tatshenshini-Alsek Rivers through
private and commercial permit systems, including scheduling, commercial
allocation, fee collection, reporting of problem wildlife occurences, etc;
• Draft a set of common management principles and objectives
for the World Heritage Site; • Continue the development of
the common World Heritage Site base map for all four parks; •
Continue to investigate the establishment of a moratorium on the clearing
of the international boundary between Canada and the United States; • Continue to seek a common name for the combined World Heritage
Site; • Continue to update the wording and replacement of the
World Heritage Site plaques; • Continue to explore and
collaborate on trans-boundary research efforts such as a watershed based
Tatashenshini-Alsek Visitor Survey, the watershed based campsite impact
and risk assessment project, the spruce beetle infestation study, etc; and
• Continue to plan and host biannual inter-agency management
meetings addressing common issues and opportunities. •
Continue to explore adding a cultural criteria which recognizes the
significant cultural values inherent to the World Heritage Site.
|
| Responsible Implementing
Agency(ies) |
| 7d Agency(ies) responsible for
implementing actions |
|
| Agency Name: |
USNPS Alaska Region |
| Name: |
Blazsak, Marcia |
| Address: |
240 W. 5th Avenue, Room 14 |
| City: |
Anchorage, Alaska |
| Postal Code: |
99501 |
| Telephone: |
907 644-3510 |
| Fax Number: |
|
| Email: |
Marcia_Blazsak@nps.gov | |
|
| Agency Name: |
Kluane National Park &
Reserve |
| Name: |
Marrin, Don |
| Address: |
P.O. Box 5495 |
| City: |
Haines Junction, Yukon |
| Postal Code: |
Y0B 1L0 |
| Telephone: |
867 634-7250 |
| Fax Number: |
867 634-7208 |
| Email: |
Don.Marrin@pc.gc.ca | |
|
| Agency Name: |
Ministry of WLAP |
| Name: |
Markides, Hugh |
| Address: |
Bag 5000, 3726 Alfred Street |
| City: |
Smithers, British Columbia |
| Postal Code: |
V0J 2N0 |
| Telephone: |
250 847-7321 |
| Fax Number: |
250 847-7728 |
| Email: |
Hugh.Markides@gems3.gov.bc.ca | |
| Timeframe for
Implementation |
| 7e Timeline for implementation of
actions |
|
Implementation of the noted actions
will take place over the coming years, through ongoing planning and
cooperation amongst site managers. |
| Needs for International
Assistance |
| 7f Anticipated Requests for
international assistance |
|
No |
| Actions State Party Intends to Request
from World Heritage Committee |
| 7g Potential Decisions for the World
Heritage Committee |
- Change to criteria for inscription
- Proposed new Statement of Significance, where
previously missing
|
| |
| Documentation |
| 8a Maps and Plans: |
- b) Topographic or other map or site plan which
locates the WHS and its boundaries, showing scale, orientation,
projection, datum, site name, date and graticule.
|
|
|
| 8b) Digital Map
available |
|
Yes |
| 8bi) Map Format |
|
|
| 8bii) Map available on
website |
|
Unanswered |