Rick Steiner, board chair of PEER, also noted that killing operations are “economically counterproductive” in addition to being “scientifically bankrupt,” as “millions of tourists travel to Alaska spending billions of dollars annually—just to catch a glimpse of Alaska’s iconic bears and wolves in the wild.”
The groups pointed to a letter signed by 55 wildlife scientists in 2018, which objected to the repeal of protections for carnivores in the interest of growing populations of caribou and other species—”privileging the human use” of wildlife “over all other considerations, including maintaining sustainable wildlife populations for future generations.” The practice is ineffective, said the scientists, in addition to being disruptive of natural biodiversity.