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Annual Repor T 2014
Annual Report 2014 2014 Highlights Forrest Steller sea lion, Eden, gave birth to a healthy male pup on July 20, 2014. Forrest is the first male Steller sea lion born in North American collections since the 1980s. This is the second pup for parents Woody and Eden. Eleanor, “Ellie,” was born on June 20, 2013. Eider Research 2014 brought the most successful breeding season for the Eider Research Program. For the first time since the program’s start, two female Steller’s eiders naturally incubated eggs and reared ducklings. The Alaska SeaLife Center is the only facility in North America to have Steller’s eiders naturally incubate and rear their young. Sea Otter BTS Another first for the Center: Sea Otter Behind-the-Scenes (BTS) Tours were offered to guests! The Sea Otter BTS provided a unique opportunity for guests to get paw-to-paw with three playful critters. New Ticketing Counter The ticketing counter got a makeover! Guests are now greeted with a harbor-themed front desk as they enter through the doors. Chiswell Island A record number of Steller sea lion births were recorded at Chiswell Island. Alaska SeaLife Center researchers confirmed 114 births as the highest number they’ve observed since research began in 1998. Family Science Night The Education Department implemented a new program for younger children and families in Seward. “Family Science Night” offers kids and adults of all ages fun and educational activities throughout the winter. 3 and its substantial research on the hearing capabilities of arctic seals. These vital connections with partner organizations enable the entire marine community to reach their goals, thereby creating sustainable marine From the President and CEO ecosystems the world over. -
POPULATION STRUCTURE and BEHAVIOR of PACIFIC HALIBUT a THESIS Presented to the Faculty of the University of Alaska Fairbanks In
Population Structure And Behavior Of Pacific Halibut Item Type Thesis Authors Seitz, Andrew C. Download date 26/09/2021 01:51:59 Link to Item http://hdl.handle.net/11122/8917 POPULATION STRUCTURE AND BEHAVIOR OF PACIFIC HALIBUT A THESIS Presented to the Faculty of the University of Alaska Fairbanks in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY By Andrew C. Seitz, B.S. Fairbanks, Alaska December 2006 Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. UMI Number: 3251429 INFORMATION TO USERS The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleed-through, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. ® UMI UMI Microform 3251429 Copyright 2007 by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights reserved. This microform edition is protected against unauthorized copying under Title 17, United States Code. ProQuest Information and Learning Company 300 North Zeeb Road P.O. Box 1346 Ann Arbor, Ml 48106-1346 Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. POPULATION STRUCTURE AND BEHAVIOR OF PACIFIC HALIBUT By Andrew C. Seitz RECOMMENDED: f\\ T; (LV rH g; Advisory Committee Chair • ' / t r ' > /^ iA ^ TZj ~r;c~■■ Head, Program in Maj^ne Science and Limnology APPROVED: Dean, School of Fisheries and OcemNSciences Jean of the Graduate School / ~7y Z<3&<c> Date Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. -
1 Noaa /Aslc #18902 1
1 NOAA /ASLC #18902 1 Alaska SeaLife Center Family At the end of the year, the Alaska SeaLife Center w as caring for 202 different species. This brings our grand total to 3,723 individuals. Birds Mammals 13 species, 142 individuals 4 species, 15 individuals --Aviary Birds-- 5 Steller Sea Lions 9 Tufted Puffins 3 Northern Sea Otters 15 Horned Puffins 3 Spotted Seals 2 Black Oystercatchers 4 Ringed Seals 3 Rhinoceros Auklets 4 King Eiders 4 Long-tailed Ducks Fish 2 Harlequin Ducks 62 species, 952 individuals 4 Pigeon Guillemots 2 Smews Invertebrates 14 Red-legged Kittiwakes 123 species, 2,614 individuals 10 Common Murres --Research Birds-- 14 Spectacled Eiders 59 Steller’s Eiders 2 2 From the President and CEO No one was prepared for what 2020 was going to were released at the same time, something never bring. It was the year of the pivot and a year of done at the Center before. extreme uncertainty. In an unprecedented fashion, we closed our doors for two months. Though the If we had a theme for 2020, it would be resiliency. world went into lockdown, the Alaska SeaLife Staff pulled together by cross training, minimizing Center still had animals to feed, a facility to costs, and provided mental support to each other maintain, and animals to rescue and rehabilitate. to get us through uncertain times. I couldn’t be Life behind inside the Center still went on but was prouder of this team. And we were awestruck by certainly different. When we closed our doors in the support of the people of Alaska. -
Seward Historic Preservation Plan
City of Seward City Council Louis Bencardino - Mayor Margaret Anderson Marianna Keil David Crane Jerry King Darrell Deeter Bruce Siemenski Ronald A. Garzini, City Manager Seward Historic Preservation Commissioners Doug Capra Donna Kowalski Virginia Darling Faye Mulholland Jeanne Galvano Dan Seavey Glenn Hart Shannon Skibeness Mike Wiley Project Historian - Anne Castellina Community Development Department Kerry Martin, Director Rachel James - Planning Assistant Contracted assistance by: Margaret Branson Tim Sczawinski Madelyn Walker Funded by: The City of Seward and the Alaska Office of History and Archaeology Recommended by: Seward Historic Preservation Commission Resolution 96-02 Seward Planning and Zoning Commission Resolution 96-11 Adopted by: Seward City Council Resolution 96-133 TABLE OF CONTENTS Introduction......................................................................................................................................1 Purpose of the Plan ..............................................................................................................1 Method .................................................................................................................................2 Goals for Historic Preservation............................................................................................3 Community History and Character ..................................................................................................4 Community Resources...................................................................................................................20 -
91St Running MOUNT MARATHON RACE 2018 Welcome to the Party!
91st Running MOUNT MARATHON RACE 2018 Welcome to the Party! Some call it crazy. We call it crazy fun. Whether you’re racing up the mountain or cheering from the sidelines, we welcome you to Seward for the 91st running of the Mount Marathon Race and our Fourth of July festivities. While you’re here, enjoy the fresh ocean air, comb the beach, and check out our trails. Peruse the food, arts and vendor booths. Feel the energy rise as thousands pour into town. Grab yourself a spot on the beach to watch the midnight fireworks — a dazzling show against the mountain rimmed sky, doubled by its reflection on the bay. Then rest up for the real show — the Mount Marathon Race®. With race starts at 9 a.m., 11 a.m. and 2 p.m., there’s plenty of action througbout the day. They race up its flank in bright colors and descend in the mountain’s gritty brown badge of honor...then run, walk, hobble, stumble or crawl to the finish line. Good thing one of our leading partners, Advanced Physical Therapy, is in the wellness business! We are thrilled to have Altra as a Platinum Partner, serving as our first ever Alaska’s Focus Photography Official Footwear Sponsor. Check out page 32 for a full list of Fourth of July festivities — and help us celebrate our independence from the ordinary! Cover: 2017 Mt. Marathon Race Winner Allie Ostrander. Photo by Joel Krahn 2 3 2018 Partners The Mount Marathon Race® would not be possible without the generous support of our partners. -
Alaska Sealife Center to Integrate Public Education with a Working Lab
Exxon Valdez Oil Spill Trustee Council estotzatloh date December 1996 I Vol. 3NO.5 Alaska SeaLife Center to integrate public education with a working lab The Alaska SeaLife Center in Seward is scheduled to open in May of there. It could be at 1,000 feet or at 10 feet, but it 1998, combining one of the world's premier cold water research has to do with where the light penetrates, what facilities with one of the state's top tourist attractions. John Hendricks the dissolved oxygen is, what are the biological took over as the SeaLife Center's first director in September, after levels in it, plus the chemistry of the water and serving five years as executive director of the Texas State Aquarium. above all, what is the temperature. The advantage During a recent interview, he outlined his plans for meshing public education with scientific research. is you bring directly into your facility the habitat of the animals that you want to study. RD. The Alaska SeaLife Center is described RD. And Resurrection Bay is ideal. as the second marine facility of its type in the JH. The bottom of Resurrection Bay is like a John Hendricks world. Where is the other one? And what makes fjord. The sides are steep and the water is deep Alaska SeaLife Center these two facilities so different from others? and the ocean comes in its purestform. That's what JH. The first one is in a fjord in Norway and we're looking for. what makes both radically different is the RU. -
2030 Comprehensive Plan Seward, Alaska
2030 COMPREHENSIVE PLAN UPDATE VOLUME II CITY OF SEWARD Adopted: May 30, 2017 prepared by: PDC Engineers 2030 COMPREHENSIVE PLAN SEWARD, ALASKA Prepared For: The City of Seward, Alaska Prepared By: PDC Engineers Anchorage, Alaska Adopted By the City Council of the City of Seward May 30, 2017 by Resolution 2017-028 Adopted By the Kenai Peninsula Borough Assembly August 15, 2017 by Ordinance 2017-18 Introduced by: Mayor, Carpenter Date: 07/1 8/1 7 Hearing: 08/15/ 17 Action: Enacted as Amended Vote: 9 Yes, 0 No, 0 Absent KENAI PENINSULA BOROUGH ORDINANCE 2017-18 AN ORDINANCE AMENDING KPB 2.56.050 TO ADOPT VOLUMES I AND II OF THE SEWARD 2030 COMPREHENSIVE PLAN UPDATE AS THE OFFICIAL COMPREHENSIVE PLAN FOR THAT PORTION OF THE BOROUGH WITHIN THE BOUNDARIES OF THE CITY OF SEWARD WHEREAS, the Kenai Peninsula Borough provides for planning on an areawide basis in accordance with AS 29.40; and WHEREAS, m accordance with KPB 21.01.025(E), cities requesting extensive comprehensive plan amendments may recommend to the Kenai Peninsula Borough Planning Commission a change to the comprehensive plan; and WHEREAS, with the completion of Volumes I and II of the Seward 2030 Comprehensive Plan, the City of Seward has prepared extensive comprehensive plan amendments for that area of the borough within the boundaries of the City of Seward; and WHEREAS, over the last two years the City of Seward Planning and Zoning Commission has held thirteen ( 13) public work sessions and meetings working on the updates; and WHEREAS, throughout the update process, members of -
United States Department of the Interior
United States Department of the Interior U.S. FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE Anchorage Fish and Wildlife Conservation Office 4700 BLM Road IN REPLY REFER TO: FWS/AFES/AFWCO Anchorage, Alaska 99507-2546 May 26, 2017 Memorandum To: Dr. James Kendall, Bureau of Ocean Energy Management, Anchorage, Alaska From: for Stewart Cogswell, Anchorage Fish and Wildlife Conservation Office, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Anchorage, Alaska Subject: Biological Opinion on Lease Sale 244 (Consultation 2016-F-0226) This document transmits the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s (Service) biological opinion based on our review of the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management’s (BOEM) proposed oil and gas Lease Sale 244 and its effects on the federally threatened Alaska breeding Steller’s eider (Polysticta stelleri), the federally threatened southwest Alaska distinct population segment (DPS) of northern sea otter (Enhydra lutris kenyoni), and designated critical habitat for the southwest Alaska DPS of northern sea otter, in accordance with section 7 of the Endangered Species Act (ESA) of 1973, as amended (16 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.). We received your July 13, 2016, request for formal consultation on July 26, 2016. We have based this biological opinion on information that accompanied your July 13, 2016, request for consultation, including the Draft Environmental Impact Statement (BOEM 2016a) and biological assessment (BOEM 2016b) for oil and gas activities associated with Lease Sale 244. We can make available a record of this consultation at the Anchorage Fish and Wildlife Office. Consultation History The following is a summary of the consultation history for this project: • July 26, 2016, the Service received a Biological Assessment and request from BOEM to initiate formal consultation for effects caused by activities from oil and gas lease sale 244 in lower Cook Inlet. -
Goal 3. Preserve and Improve Quality of Life in the Kenai Peninsula
Goal 3. Preserve and improve quality of life in the Kenai Peninsula Borough through increased access to local and regional facilities, activities, programs and services. FOCUS AREA: ENERGY AND UTILITIES HEADLINES Enstar Natural Gas Company has contracted with AIX Energy for gas supplies through 2021. The resurgence of independent oil and gas companies in the Cook Inlet Basin is providing new supplies of gas and long-term contracts. Bradley Lake expansion via the Battle Creek diversion will add about 37,300 megawatt hours per year from the hydroelectric facility. The Alaska Energy authority owns Bradley Lake Hydroelectric Project, but contracts with Homer Electric Association (HEA) to operate it. HEA provides electricity to the southern and central portion of the Kenai Peninsula. Ocean Renewable Power Company applied to surrender the preliminary license for a proposed East Foreland tidal energy project in Cook Inlet. FERC granted a preliminary permit in 2011 to conduct a feasibility study for constructing the East Foreland tidal energy project. Tidal energy is viable, but the strength of the conventional energy market in Alaska affects the integration of new technology, making it financially infeasible (Marine Energy 2016). The Borough does not provide utilities but assists in utility provision through its platting authority and by requiring dedication of utility easements on new subdivision plats. Private utility companies, some cities, and the U.S. Public Health Service provide utilities to residents in the borough. Borough subdivision plat review is coordinated with private utilities and cities to ensure easements are adequate to serve future utilities. WHERE HAVE WE BEEN? WHERE ARE WE NOW? WHERE ARE WE HEADED? Energy Homer Electric Association (HEA) provides electricity to the southern and central portion of the Kenai Peninsula, including: Kenai, Soldotna, Nikiski, Homer, Seldovia, Nanwalek and Port Graham. -
Visiting Seward 2020
VISITING SEWARD 2020 MUST DO’S IN SEWARD KAYAKING, HIKING & GLACIER CRUISE TOURS Whether you’re a first-time adventurer, or a seasoned explorer, there are many options for exploring Resurrection Bay and Kenai Fjords National Park. Half-day, full-day and multi-day kayaking, kayak & hike combos, and kayak & cruise combos. Sunny Cove Kayaking, www.sunnycove.com, 1.907.224.4426 WILDLIFE & GLACIER CRUISES Explore Resurrection Bay and Kenai Fjords National Park while listening to naturalist narration aboard a comfortable tour boat. Adventures into Northwestern Fjord, and Aialik Bay are available daily. Watch for whales, orcas, seals, puffins, eagles, sea lions and more! Kenai Fjords Tours, www.kenaifjords.com, 1.907.224.8068 Prefer a small boat option? View Resurrection Bay and Kenai Fjords National Park with the naturalist captains of Seward Ocean Excursions. Seward Ocean Excursions, www.sewardoceanexcursions.com, 1.907.599.0499 DOG SLEDDING TOURS Visit the dog camps of Iditarod racers and learn more about ‘The Last Great Race.’ Options include a kennel tour and a dog sled ride, or for the ultimate adventure, choose the helicopter dog sledding tour on Godwin Glacier. Turning Heads Kennel, www.turningheadskennel.com, 1.907.362.4354 Seavey’s Ididaride, www.ididaride.com, 1.907.224.8607 HIKING Seward is home to a multitude of hiking trails, from easy beach walks and rainforest trails to quad burning climbs to mountain ridges and glacier overviews. • Harding Icefield Trail • Exit Glacier Trail • Tonsina Point Trail • Mount Marathon Trail 4 FLIGHT SEEING We always recommend getting in the air while visiting Seward. Alaska is a huge state, and your perspective will change when you see our majestic mountains, glaciers and fjords from the air. -
The Annual Report 2011 Letter from the Board Chair
THE ANNUAL REPORT 2011 LETTER FROM THE BOARD CHAIR It’s amazing how fast three years fly by. When our Center as a member of the Scientific Advisory Committee. recently-retired CEO, Dr. Ian Dutton, began his role in He’ll also assist with the Center’s 3rd Alaska Marine Gala November 2008, the country was in the midst of the on February 18th, 2012 at the Dena’ina Center. worst economic downturn since the Great Depression. To ensure continued, robust successes for the Center, As we search for a new leader, the board appointed Ian knew a lot of work had to be done. He immediately Dr. Tara Riemer Jones, our Chief Operating Officer, as re-geared the Alaska SeaLife Center (ASLC), utilizing Interim CEO. Dr. Jones has been with the Center for active engagement of board members, staff, and over eight years and brings a wealth of experience and partner organizations. Ian also championed the new dedication. strategic plan, Deep Blue 2020, which has already proven invaluable. This strategic plan helped create a On behalf of the board, staff, volunteers, and members of greater diversity of funding, ensuring our mission-driven the Alaska SeaLife Center, we thank you for your support work will meet the needs of Alaska’s policy and decision through 2011. We encourage you to stay involved as we makers. move forward with many new and exciting phases of our strategic plan. Our re-engineering culminated in 2011 when the ASLC became accredited by the Association of Zoos and Finally, I hope to see you at our 2012 Alaska Marine Gala! Aquariums (AZA). -
Alaska Sealife Center 2019 Annual Report
Alaska SeaLife Center 2019 Annual Report Alaska SeaLife Center Family At the end of the year, the Alaska SeaLife Center was caring for 222 different species. This brings our grand total to 4,412 individuals. Birds 13 species, 147 individuals --Aviary Birds-- 9 Tufted Puffins 14 Horned Puffins 2 Black Oystercatchers 3 Rhinoceros Auklets 14 Red-legged Kittiwakes 6 King Eiders 4 Long-tailed Ducks 2 Harlequin Ducks 4 Pigeon Guillemots 2 Smews 7 Common Murres --Research Birds-- 18 Spectacled Eiders 62 Steller’s Eiders Mammals 4 species, 17 individuals 4 Steller Sea Lions 5 Northern Sea Otters 4 Spotted Seals 4 Ringed Seals Fish 82 species, 1,560 individuals Invertebrates 123 species, 2,688 individuals Stories – Highlighting 2019 This photo of Dutch was taken in January 2019. Dutch is one of the four ringed seals part of an ongoing Ice Seal Research Program at the Center in partnership with the Long Marine Laboratory of University of California, Santa Cruz. Ringed seals are a species of ice seal that inhabit the Arctic. Concern about depleting sea ice has ignited our research on this little known species. Our team is trying to answer the question, “how much energy does it take to be an ice seal?” In February, the Alaska SeaLife Center hosted its annual Alaska Marine Gala, which included various fundraising elements such as a giving challenge, a live auction, a silent auction, and raffles and games throughout the evening. Proceeds helped to ensure the ASLC continues to carry out mission related initiatives in research, education, and response capacities. Throughout the year, the Alaska SeaLife Center participated in the conservation efforts such as National Skip the Straw Day, Plastic Free EcoChallenge, and World Oceans Day, encouraging our staff and the public to pledge to take steps to become educated on the dangers of single-use plastics in our oceans.