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Walrus haul out near Port Heiden

John Christensen

Residents saw a few hundred walrus hauled out at the beginning of April. By the end of April, they reported seeing about a thousand. On a recent flight over the shoreline, an ADF&G biologist saw only 100.

Some unexpected animals are loafing on beaches near Port Heiden this spring, and their numbers seem to be fluctuating. The Bristol Bay village on the north side of the Alaska Peninsula first reported seeing walrus hauled out in early April.

John Christensen, a resident of the village, was riding his four-wheeler when he first spotted them.

“We went for a ride up the beach and ran into a large amount of walrus, a few hundred of them. We’ve never seen anything like this here before,” Christensen said.

Over the course of a month, the residents saw more groups of the ungainly marine mammal resting on the shores from Hook Lagoon to Strogonof Point.

“There has been an increase in the walruses,” said Christensen on April 25. “At first there was only a few hundred spotted pods all over the place. Now there’s more. We couldn’t get a good view from the distance we were at, but it looks like there’s over a thousand.”

On May 1, Bob Murphy, area management biologist with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, flew the shoreline from Pilot Point to Port Moller.

“We did see a group of about 100 walrus about 20 miles northeast on the beach. So we did see 100 animals where I’ve never seen 100 walrus hauled out before,” said Murphy, noting also that the stretch of flat, sandy beach where the walrus lay was atypical topography for a walrus haul out.

“Usually walrus like to have a cape behind them,” he explained.

Walrus pods are prone to stampeding off a beach and into the water if they are disturbed, which can result in some animals trampling others. To guard against needless death and injury, walrus are protected from harassment under the Marine Mammal Protection Act.

Harassment could include noisy fishing boats passing too near to the resting walrus. In the Ugashik District, for example, ADF&G changed the line for the commercial salmon fishery in 2016 and 2017 when more than a thousand walrus hauled out at Cape Greig. The amended boundary allowed the walrus and boats a 1-mile buffer zone.

It is too early to rule out such a measure for the Alaska Peninsula Area, but it is also too early to know to know if the walrus will even be there in a few weeks.

“It could just be they’re just staging there for a bit or resting and they’re eventually going to go to their traditional haul out areas,” Murphy said. “So we’re just going to keep an eye on it and see if they disappear or if more show up or if they move around. The place that they were in is an area that is closed to commercial salmon fishing, so I think if they stayed there, they would be no obstructions to anything. But, more than likely, I would expect that they may move.”

According to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, walrus have hauled out near Port Heiden before, but it has been about two decades.

As Port Heiden residents wait to see if their new guests are here for the summer or just making a pit stop, they say that they are keeping their distance to ensure they don’t disturb the animals.

Contact the author at avery@kdlg.org or 907-842-5281.