Current through August 30, 2024
The following management areas are subject to special
restrictions:
(1) the Joint Base
Elmendorf-Richardson (JBER) Management Area:
(A) the area consists of the Joint Base
Elmendorf-Richardson (JBER) Military Reservation;
(B) the area is open to the taking of big
game by permit only; small game, unclassified game, and fur animals in areas
designated by the base commander; the department will set conditions under
5
AAC 92.050; a person wishing to hunt small game must
have successfully completed a certified hunter education course.
(C) up to 25 percent of the drawing permits
will be issued to applicants who are qualified disabled veterans and qualified
disabled active-duty military personnel; an applicant under this subparagraph
must either
(i) possess a United States
military physician's affidavit stating that the applicant has a 50 percent or
greater service-connected disability; or
(ii) be certified by the United States
Department of Veterans Affairs as having incurred a 50 percent or greater
service-connected disability;
(2) the Eagle River Management Area:
(A) the area consists of the Eagle River
drainage upstream from the Glenn Highway in Unit 14(C);
(B) the area is closed to hunting, except
(i) sheep hunting by permit;
(ii) black and brown bear hunting by permit;
before hunting a bear, a person wishing to hunt must complete a hunter safety
course for which a certification of completion is issued;
(iii) small game may be taken by archery,
shotgun, falconry, crossbow, or muzzleloader by permit;
(iv) deleterious exotic wildlife may be taken
by air rifle with rifled barrel, bow and arrow (with blunts or other special
small-game points), and falconry only;
(v) goat hunting by permit;
(3) the Anchorage
Management Area:
(A) the area consists of all
Cook Inlet drainages south of the Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson (JBER)
Military Reservation and north of and including Rainbow Creek, but excluding
the Anchorage Coastal Wildlife Refuge;
(B) the Anchorage Management Area is closed
to hunting, except that
(i) moose hunting is
allowed by permit only;
(ii) small
game and waterfowl may be taken by falconry, except that waterfowl may not be
taken in the Ship Creek drainage west of Post Road;
(iii) deleterious exotic wildlife may be
taken by air rifle with rifled barrel, bow and arrow (with blunts or other
special small-game points), and falconry only;
(4) the Eklutna Lake Management Area:
(A) the area consists of the drainages of
Eklutna River and Eklutna Lake in Unit 14(C) upstream from the Glenn Highway,
excluding those drainages flowing into the East Fork of Eklutna River upstream
from the bridge above the Lake and Thunderbird Creek;
(B) the area is closed to hunting, except
that
(i) small game may be taken by falconry
or bow and arrow only, from September 1 through April 30;
(ii) moose hunting is allowed by permit with
bow and arrow only;
(iii) black
bear may be taken by bow and arrow only, from September 1 through May 31; a
person wishing to hunt a black bear must complete a hunter safety course for
which a certification of completion is issued;
(iv) sheep may be taken by permit, and by bow
and arrow only, from September 1 through October 31;
(v) brown bear hunting is allowed by permit
with bow and arrow only, from September 1 through May 31; a person wishing to
hunt a brown bear must complete a hunter safety course for which a
certification of completion is issued;
(5) the Chugach State Park Management Area:
(A) the area consists of that portion of
Chugach State Park outside of the Eagle River, Anchorage, and Eklutna
Management Areas;
(B) the area is
open to hunting under regulations governing Unit 14(C), except as follows:
(i) black bear hunting is open from the
September 1 through May 31, for one bear only;
(ii) no hunting is allowed for squirrel,
wolf, wolverine, coyote, and unclassified game;
(iii) small game hunting is prohibited in the
Tokle Creek drainage (Arctic Valley Ski Area);
(iv) brown bear hunting is open by drawing
permit only from September 1 through May 31;
(6) the Skilak Loop Wildlife Management Area:
(A) the area consists of that portion of
Units 15(A) and 15(B) bounded by a line beginning at the easternmost junction
of the Sterling Highway and the Skilak Loop Road (milepost 58), then due south
to the south bank of the Kenai River, then southerly along the south bank of
the Kenai River to its confluence with Skilak Lake, then westerly along the
north shore of Skilak Lake to Lower Skilak Lake Campground, then northerly
along the Lower Skilak Lake Campground Road and the Skilak Loop Road to its
westernmost junction with the Sterling Highway (milepost 75.1), then easterly
along the Sterling Highway to the point of origin;
(B) the area is closed to hunting and
trapping, except that
(i) moose may be taken
by permit only;
(ii) small game may
be taken by;
(a) falconry or bow and arrow
only from October 1 through March 1; and
(b) standard .22 caliber rimfire firearm
crossbow and shotgun only, by hunters 17 years old or younger accompanied by a
licensed hunter 21 years old or older who has successfully completed a
certified hunter education course if the youth has not successfully completed a
certified hunter education course;
(iii) wolf, coyote, and lynx may be taken
under applicable hunting regulations from November 10 through March 31, except
within 1/4 mile of the Engineer, Kelly, Petersen, and Hidden Lake campgrounds
and within 1/4 mile of boat launches.
(C) a firearm may not be discharged within
one-quarter mile of any campground;
(7) the Dalton Highway Corridor Management
Area:
(A) the area consists of those portions
of Units 20 and 24 - 26 extending five miles from each side of the Dalton
Highway, including the driveable surface of the Dalton Highway, from the Yukon
River to the Arctic Ocean, and including the Prudhoe Bay Closed Area;
(B) the area within the Prudhoe Bay Closed
Area is closed to the taking of big game; the remainder of the Dalton Highway
Corridor Management Area is open to the take of furbearers and is closed to
hunting; however, big game, small game, and fur animals may be taken in the
area by bow and arrow only, and small game may be taken by falconry;
(C) repealed 6/23/2022;
(D) any hunter traveling on the Dalton
Highway must stop at any check station operated by the department within the
Dalton Highway Corridor Management Area;
(8) the Minto Flats Management Area:
(A) the area consists of that portion of Unit
20 bounded by the Elliott Highway beginning at Mile 118, then northeasterly to
Mile 96, then east to the Tolovana Hotsprings Dome, then east to the Winter Cat
Trail, then along the Cat Trail south to the Old Telegraph Trail at Dunbar,
then westerly along the trail to a point where it joins the Tanana River three
miles above Old Minto, then along the north bank of the Tanana River (including
all channels and sloughs except Swanneck Slough), to the confluence of the
Tanana and Tolovana Rivers and then northerly to the point of
beginning;
(B) the area is open to
moose hunting except that aircraft and airboats may not be used for moose
hunting or to transport moose, moose hunters, or moose hunting equipment within
the Minto Flats Management Area;
(9) the Tok Management Area:
(A) the area consists of those portions of
Units 12, 13(C), and 20(D) bounded by a line along the Alaska Highway east from
the west side of the Johnson River bridge to Tok Junction, then south along the
Tok-Slana cutoff (Glenn Highway) to the Slana River; then west along the north
bank of the Slana River to its confluence with Lost Creek, then up the north
side of Lost Creek to the divide between Lost Creek and Jack Creek, then north
to the Unit 12 boundary, then west along the Unit 12 boundary to Mount Kimball
(63º 17' N. lat., 144º 40' W. long.), then west in a straight line to
Mount Gakona (63º 17' N. lat., 145º 12' W. long.), then southwesterly
to the head of Canwell Glacier, then northerly to the head of the Johnson
Glacier, then northerly along the west bank of the Johnson Glacier and Johnson
River to the Johnson River bridge;
(B) the area is open to sheep hunting by
permit only;
(10) the
Fairbanks Management Area:
(A) this area
consists of that portion of Unit 20(B) bounded by a line from the confluence of
Rosie Creek and the Tanana River, northerly along Rosie Creek to the middle
fork of Rosie Creek through Section 26 to the Parks Highway, then east along
the Parks Highway to Alder Creek, then upstream along Alder Creek to its
confluence with Emma Creek, then upstream along Emma Creek to its headwaters,
then northerly along the hydrographic divide between Goldstream Creek drainages
and Cripple Creek drainages to the summit of Ester Dome, then down Sheep Creek
to its confluence with Goldstream Creek, then easterly along Goldstream Creek
to Sheep Creek Road, then north on Sheep Creek Road to Murphy Dome Road, then
west on Murphy Dome Road to Old Murphy Dome Road, then east on Old Murphy Dome
Road to the Elliot Highway, then south on the Elliot Highway to Davidson Ditch,
then southeasterly along the Davidson Ditch to its confluence with the
tributary to Goldstream Creek in Section 29, then downstream along the
tributary to its confluence with Goldstream Creek, then in a straight line to
First Chance Creek, then up First Chance Creek to the summit of Tungsten Hill,
then southerly along Steele Creek to its intersection with the Trans-Alaska
Pipeline right-of-way, then southeasterly along the easterly edge of the
Trans-Alaska Pipeline right-of-way to the Chena River, then along the north
bank of the Chena River to the Moose Creek dike, then southerly along Moose
Creek dike to its intersection with the Tanana River, and then westerly along
the north bank of the Tanana River to the point of beginning;
(B) the area is open to moose hunting by bow
and arrow only, except that the portion within Creamer's Refuge is open to
moose hunting by bow and arrow and muzzleloader only;
(C) up to 25 percent of the drawing permits
will be issued to applicants who are qualified disabled veterans and qualified
disabled active-duty military personnel; an applicant under this subparagraph
must either
(i) possess a United States
military physician's affidavit stating that the applicant has a 50 percent or
greater service-connected disability; or
(ii) be certified by the United States
Department of Veterans Affairs as having incurred a 50 percent or greater
service-connected disability;
(D) from April 15 through October 1,
waterfowl on Chena Slough may be taken by falconry and bow and flu-flu arrow
only;
(11) the Birchwood
Management Area:
(A) the area consists of all
land bounded on the south and west by Eagle River and the Joint Base
Elmendorf-Richardson (JBER) Military Reservation, on the east by the Glenn
Highway, and on the north by Peters Creek;
(B) the area is closed to hunting, except
that
(i) small game may be taken by air rifle
with rifled barrel, shotgun, falconry, crossbow, and bow and arrow only, north
and west of the Alaska Railroad;
(ii) moose hunting is allowed by drawing
permit, by bow and arrow only;
(iii) deleterious exotic wildlife may be
taken by air rifle with rifled barrel, bow and arrow (with blunts or other
special small-game points), and falconry only;
(12) the Ferry Trail Management Area:
(A) the area consists of that portion of Unit
20(A) bounded on the north by the Rex Trail; bounded on the west by the east
bank of the Nenana River from its intersection with the Rex Trail south to the
divide forming the north boundary of the Lignite Creek drainage; bounded on the
south by that divide easterly and southerly to the headwaters of Sanderson
Creek at Usibelli Peak, then along a southwesterly line to the confluence of
Healy Creek and Coal Creek, then upstream easterly along the south bank of
Healy Creek to the north fork of Healy Creek, then along the north fork of
Healy Creek to its headwaters; bounded on the east by a straight line from the
headwaters of the north fork of Healy Creek to the headwaters of Dexter Creek,
then along the east bank of Dexter Creek to the Totatlanika River, then down
the east bank of Totatlanika River to the Rex Trail;
(B) the area is open to caribou hunting by
permit only;
(13) the
Healy-Lignite Management Area:
(A) the area
consists of that portion of Unit 20(A) that includes the entire Lignite Creek
drainage, and that portion of the Nenana River drainage south of the Lignite
Creek drainage and north of a boundary beginning at the confluence of the
Nenana River and Healy Creek, then easterly along the south bank of Healy Creek
to its confluence with Coal Creek, then northeasterly to the headwaters of
Sanderson Creek at Usibelli Peak;
(B) the area is open to hunting by bow and
arrow only, and small game may be taken by shotgun and falconry;
(14) Lime Village Management Area:
(A) the area consists of that portion of Unit
19(E) drained by the Stoney River from the mouth of the Stink River, including
the Stink River drainage, upstream to but not including the Can Creek
drainage;
(B) the area is open to
caribou hunting as specified in
5
AAC 85.025(a) (14);
(C) repealed 6/16/91;
(18) the Palmer-Wasilla Management Area:
(A) the area consists of that portion of Unit
14(A) bounded by a line beginning at the intersection of the George Parks
Highway and the Glenn Highway, then east and north along the Glenn Highway to
the Palmer Fishhook Road, then west and north along the Palmer Fishhook Road to
the Faulk Road intersection, then west along the road and section line to Tex
Al Drive and along Tex Al Drive to the Wasilla Fishhook Road, then south along
the Wasilla Fishhook Road to Welch Road, then west along Welch Road to the
south bank of the Little Susitna River, then west along the south bank of the
Little Susitna River to the bridge at North Shushana Drive, then south along
North Shushana Drive to Shrock Road, then west along Shrock Road to Church
Road, then south along Church Road to the George Parks Highway, then west along
the George Parks Highway to Vine Road, then south along Vine Road to Knik Goose
Bay Road, then north along Knik Goose Bay Road to Fairview Loop Road, then
south and east along Fairview Loop Road to the George Parks Highway, then east
along the George Parks Highway to the intersection with the Glenn
Highway;
(B) the area is closed to
hunting except that
(i) big game may be taken
by muzzleloader, shotguns with slugs, crossbow, and bow and arrow
only;
(ii) small game, deleterious
exotic wildlife, and fur animals may be taken by muzzleloader, shotgun, air
rifle, falconry, and bow and arrow only;
(iii) waterfowl on Finger Lake may be taken
by falconry, and bow and flu-flu arrow only;
(iv) fur animals and furbearers taken under a
trapping license by methods other than by trapping or snaring may be taken by
muzzleloader, shotgun, air rifle, falconry, or bow and arrow only;
(19) the Delta Junction
Management Area:
(A) the area consists of
that portion of Unit 20(D) bounded by a line beginning at the confluence of
Donnelly Creek and the Delta River, then up Donnelly Creek to the Richardson
Highway (Mile 238), then north along the east side of the highway to the "12
Mile Crossing Trail" (Mile 252.4), then east along the south side of the "12
Mile Crossing Trail" and across Jarvis Creek to the 33-Mile Loop Road, then
northeast along the 33-Mile Loop Road to the intersection with the Alaska
Highway (Mile 1414), then southeast along the north side of the Alaska Highway
to the bridge at Sawmill Creek (Mile 1403.9), then down the west bank of
Sawmill Creek to its confluence with Clearwater Creek and down the south bank
of Clearwater Creek to its confluence with the Tanana River, then down the
Tanana River to its confluence with the Delta River, and upstream along the
east bank of the Delta River to the point of beginning at Donnelly
Creek;
(B) the area is open to
moose hunting by permit only;
(C)
up to 25 percent of the drawing permits will be issued to applicants who are
qualified disabled veterans and qualified disabled active-duty military
personnel; an applicant under this subparagraph must
(i) be certified by the United States
Department of Veterans Affairs as a recipient of the Purple Heart Medal;
and
(ii) be certified by the United
States Department of Veterans Affairs as having incurred a 100 percent
service-connected disability;
(21) the Upper Holitna-Hoholitna Management
Area:
(A) the area consists of all portions
of Unit 19(B) within the Aniak, Kipchuk, Salmon, Holitna, and Hoholitna river
drainages;
(B) all hunters in the
area passing a check station established by the department must stop at that
check station;
(C) a moose or
caribou taken in the area by a hunter accessing the area by aircraft must be
transported out of the area by aircraft;
(24) the Petersburg Management Area:
(A) the area consists of that portion of Unit
3 on Mitkof Island north and west of a line from Frederick Point to the highest
point in Section 8, T59S, R90E, to the highest point in Section 7, T59S, R80E,
to the highest point in Section 13, T59S, R80E, to the highest point in Section
23, T59S, R79E; then due south to 56° 42' 24" N;
(B) the area is closed to hunting except that
game may be taken by bow and arrow only in areas south of Haugen Drive and
outside of 100 vards of any airport property, dwellings, businesses, highways,
roads, or streets; and small game may be taken by falconry;
(25) the Pt. MacKenzie Youth Hunt Management
Area:
(A) the area consists of that
southwestern portion of Unit 14(A) bounded on the west by the Little Susitna
River, bounded on the north by a line along Knik-Goose Bay Road from mile 14 to
its junction with Pt. MacKenzie Road, then along Pt. MacKenzie Road, Ayrshire
Road, and Little Susitna Access Road to the Little Susitna River;
(B) the area is open to moose hunting by
drawing permit issued to a child, in addition to other legal seasons; the
department may issue a drawing permit to a child, as follows:
(i) the permit may be issued to a child aged
10 to 17 who must be accompanied in the field by an adult 21 years of age or
older, with the child being the permittee;
(ii) a moose harvested under a permit issued
under this paragraph will count against the bag limits of both the child and
accompanying adult;
(iii) only the
child may shoot a moose, except that the accompanying adult may shoot the moose
only to prevent the moose from escaping after having been wounded by the
child;
(iv) in addition to the
permit specified in this paragraph, the child and accompanying adult must have
the licenses, harvest tickets, and tags required under this title and AS 16 in
possession while in the field;
(26) the Kodiak Road System Youth Hunt
Management Area:
(A) Unit 8, that portion of
Kodiak Island north of a line from the head of Settlers Cove to Crescent Lake
(57º 52' N. lat., 152º 58' W. long.), and east of a line from the
outlet of Crescent Lake to Mount Ellison Peak and from Mount Ellison Peak to
Pokati Point at Whale Passage, and that portion of Kodiak Island east of a line
from the mouth of Saltery Creek to the mouth of Elbow Creek;
(B) the area is open to deer hunting by a
child aged 10 to 17 by bow and arrow, crossbow, or muzzleloader only, as
follows:
(i) the child must have successfully
completed a department-approved hunter education class;
(ii) the child hunting with a muzzleloader
must have successfully completed a department-approved muzzleloader hunter
education course that includes ballistic limitations of muzzleloading weapons
and a proficiency test;
(iii) the
child hunting with a bow and arrow must have successfully completed a
department-approved bowhunter education course;
(iv) the child hunting with a crossbow must
have successfully completed a department-approved crossbow education
course;
(27)
the Yakutat Youth Hunt Management Area:
(A)
Unit 5(A);
(B) the area is open to
deer hunting from October 15 through October 31 by a child aged 10 to 17 years
of age who has successfully completed a department-approved hunter education
class and who is accompanied by a licensed resident adult aged 21 years of age
or older;
(28) Unit 16(B)
Youth Hunt Management Area;
(A) the area
consists of the mainland portion of Unit 16(B);
(B) in addition to other legal seasons, the
area is open to moose hunting by a drawing permit issued to a child; the
department may issue a permit to a child, as follows:
(i) a permit may be issued to a resident
child aged 10 to 17 who will be accompanied in the field by a resident adult 21
years of age or older, with the child being the permittee;
(ii) permittees must have successfully
completed a certified basic hunter education course;
(iii) a moose harvested under a permit issued
under this section will count against the bag limits of both the child and
accompanying adult;
(iv) only the
child may shoot a moose, except that the accompanying adult may shoot the
animal only to prevent the animal from escaping after having been wounded by
the child;
(v) in addition to the
permit specified in this section, the child and accompanying adult must have
the licenses, harvest tickets, and tags required under this title and AS 16 in
possession while in the field;
(30) the Hatcher Pass Youth Hunt Management
Area:
(A) the area consists of that portion
of Unit 14(A) within the upper Little Susitna River drainage upstream of mile
13.6 on Hatcher Pass Road (Gold Mint Trail parking area) and 1,4 mile away from
the road including Archangel and Fishhook Creeks, and upper Little Susitna
River drainages. Also, portions of the upper Willow Creek drainage upstream of
the confluence of Willow and Craigie Creeks, including Grubstake Gulch and
Homestake Creeks, Summit Lake, and Bullion and Skyscraper Mountains. There is
no discharge of firearms allowed within 1,4 mile of the road.
(B) from August 10 to August 25, the area is
closed to small game hunting except that small game may be taken by a hunter 17
years old or younger accompanied by a licensed hunter 21 years old or older who
has successfully completed a certified hunter education course if the youth
hunter has not successfully completed a certified hunter education
course.
(31) the Eastern
Brooks Range Management Area consists of those portions of Unit 25(A) bounded
on the east by the East Fork Chandalar River beginning at the confluence of Red
Sheep Creek and proceeding southwesterly downstream to the confluence with Crow
Nest Creek, continuing up Crow Nest Creek, through Portage Lake, to its
confluence with the Junjik River, then down the Jnnjik River past Timber Lake
and a larger tributary to a major, unnamed tributary northwesterly, for
approximately six miles where the stream forks into two roughly equal
drainages, the boundary follows the easternmost fork proceeding almost due
north to the headwaters and intersects the Continental Divide; the boundary
then follows the Continental Divide easterly, through Carter Pass, then
easterly and northeasterly approximately 62 miles along the divide to the
headwaters of the most northerly tributary of Red Sheep Creek, then follows
southerly along the divide designating the eastern extreme of the Red Sheep
Creek drainage, and then to the confluence of Red Sheep Creek and the East Fork
Chandalar Rivery.
Authority:AS
16.05.255
AS 16.05.258
AS
16.05.789