PALMER, Alaska (KTUU) – With only one more week until Christmas, there’s still some time left to get your Christmas tree. But if you’re cutting your own tree this year, there are a few things you’ll need to know.
The Alaska Division of Forestry & Fire Protection (DOF) gives a few guidelines:
Find unrestricted state land by using the DOF website. State parks aren’t allowed.
One tree per household
Less than 15 feet tall
Personal use only, do not sell
Cut the tree close to the ground, leaving little to no stump
Cut the whole tree
Respect private property
Protect seedlings so they can grow into future Christmas trees
“I would recommend bringing the tree into your garage, letting it sit overnight kind of let the branches warm up a little bit nice and slowly. Let them relax a little bit,” Stephen Nickel with DOF said. “And then make a fresh cut before you put it in the in the stand, before you put the water on.”
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An aerial view of a large aggregation of adult beluga whales in a bay during the summer in the High Arctic. (Photo credit: Greg O’Corry-Crowe and Cortney Watt, Arctic Whale Research Program – FAU/DFO)
Study Snapshot: In the icy waters of Alaska’s Bristol Bay, beluga whales survive through a surprising strategy: mating with multiple partners over several years. Researchers from FAU Harbor Branch, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, and the North Slope Department of Wildlife Management used long-term genetic analysis and behavioral observations to show that both males and females share reproductive opportunities, creating numerous half-siblings and maintaining genetic diversity in this small, isolated population.
This polygynandrous system helps buffer the population against genetic drift, the random loss of genes in small groups. By spreading reproduction across many individuals over a long reproductive lifespan, belugas reduce inbreeding and preserve long-term resilience, highlighting the critical role of both male strategies and female mate choice in shaping the next generation.
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In the icy waters of Alaska’s Bristol Bay, a new study reveals how a small population of beluga whales (Delphinapterus leucas) survive the long haul through a surprising strategy: they mate with multiple partners over several years. The combination of long-term genetics, observation and careful analysis is starting to reveal some of the most intimate insights into one of the Arctic’s most elusive whales.
Beluga whales live in a world that’s difficult for scientists to observe, so surprisingly little is known about how they choose mates, compete for partners, or raise their young in the wild.
Researchers from Florida Atlantic University’s Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute in collaboration with the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, and the North Slope Borough Department of Wildlife Management in Alaska, are the first to uncover how wild beluga whales mate, who fathers which calves, and how these reproductive strategies influence genetic diversity and inbreeding.
Over 13 years, researchers collected genetic samples from 623 beluga whales in Bristol Bay, while also observing their social groupings and ages. This population is composed of about 2,000 whales and is largely isolated, with little or no mixing with other populations, offering a unique opportunity to study them as a distinct population.
Because belugas are long-lived, researchers focused on short-term mating strategies – what happens in a single breeding season or across a few years – rather than an entire lifetime. They wanted to determine if beluga whales in Bristol Bay were polygynous, where one male mates with multiple females; polyandrous, where one female mates with multiple males; or possibly polygynandrous, where both males and females have multiple mates.
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Published in Frontiers in Marine Science, the study reveals that this beluga whale population engages in highly strategic mating – a polygynandrous system. Both males and females mate with multiple partners over several years. Variance in reproductive success among individuals is moderate rather than being dominated by just a few individuals. This “mate switching” results in many half-siblings and few full-siblings and may reduce the risk of inbreeding and help maintain genetic diversity despite the population’s small size and isolation.
“What makes this study so thrilling is that it upends our long-standing assumptions about this Arctic species,” said Greg O’Corry-Crowe, Ph.D., senior author, a research professor of Wildlife Evolution and Behavior at FAU Harbor Branch and a National Geographic Explorer. “Because males are much larger than females and appear to spend little time associating with mothers and calves, scientists believed belugas were likely to be highly polygynous, where males spend a lot of time competing for mates and only a few dominant males fathering most of the calves. Our findings tell a very different story. In the short term, males are only moderately polygynous. One explanation we think lies in their incredible longevity – belugas can live perhaps 100 years or more. Rather than competing intensely in a single season, males appear to play the long game, spreading their reproductive efforts over many years. It appears to be a ‘take your time, there’s plenty of fish in the sea’ strategy.”
Meanwhile, findings from the study show that females have their own equally fascinating reproductive strategy. Rather than sticking with a single partner, they frequently switch mates from one breeding season to the next. This behavior may serve as a form of risk management, allowing females to avoid pairing with low-quality males and increasing the likelihood of producing healthy, genetically diverse offspring.
“It’s a striking reminder that female choice can be just as influential in shaping reproductive success as the often-highlighted battles of male-male competition,” said O’Corry-Crowe. “Such strategies highlight the subtle, yet powerful ways in which females exert control over the next generation, shaping the evolutionary trajectory of the species.”
Interestingly, researchers did not find any differences between older and younger adults in terms of how many had young calves in the population at any one time, for either males or females. However, older mothers had more surviving calves than younger ones, suggesting experience, body condition, and mate choice boost reproductive success. Most adults – male and female – had only a few offspring at a time, reflecting slow female reproduction, and the fact that males father only a small number of calves each year.
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The study underscores the importance of considering mating systems in conservation, especially for small or isolated populations. In polygynandrous systems, mate choice, partner switching, and shared reproductive opportunities spread genes more evenly, maintaining genetic diversity, limiting inbreeding, and offsetting the deleterious impacts of small effective population size. This helps buffer against genetic drift, which can otherwise erode diversity when only a few individuals reproduce.
“Understanding these dynamics matters for conservation. If only a few males father most calves, the effective population size becomes much smaller than the number of whales actually present,” said O’Corry-Crowe. “This loss of genetic diversity increases the risk of inbreeding and reduces the population’s ability to adapt to environmental change. Frequent mate switching combined with low reproductive ‘skew’ and possibly the active avoidance of mating with close relatives, may be effective strategies to maintaining the genetic health of relatively small populations.”
Much of the motivation for this study came from the Indigenous communities of Bristol Bay who worked with the team of scientists to conduct the research and to meld scientific research with Indigenous knowledge as a means to protect and co-manage beluga whales in a changing Arctic and sub-arctic. Their partnership was invaluable to the success of the project.
“We cannot afford to be complacent. Small populations still face the dangers of genetic erosion. But we can be optimistic that beluga whale mating strategies provide evidence of nature’s resilience and offers hope for those working to save and recover small populations of any species,” said O’Corry-Crowe.
Study co-authors are Lori Quakenbush, Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Arctic Marine Mammal Program; Tatiana Ferrer, coordinator of research programs, FAU Harbor Branch; and John J. Citta, Ph.D., and Anna Bryan, Alaska Department of Fish and Game, Arctic Marine Mammal Program.
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This research was supported by the Alaska Beluga Whale Committee, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game, the National Marine Fisheries Service, the North Pacific Research Board, NOAA, and FAU Harbor Branch.
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Beluga whales in the High Arctic during the summer. A group of beluga whale bulls in a bay, followed by two cow-calf pairs in a shallow river estuary. An all-male group of beluga whale bulls swims alongside a female with a young calf, showing the size difference between adult males and females and the cream-gray color of the calf. The video ends with a large aggregation of adult beluga whales in a bay during the summer in the High Arctic. (Video Credit: Greg O’Corry-Crowe and Cortney Watt, Arctic Whale Research Program – FAU/DFO)
A group of beluga whale bulls in a bay during the summer in the High Arctic. (Photo credit: Greg O’Corry-Crowe and Cortney Watt, Arctic Whale Research Program – FAU/DFO)
Two beluga whale cow-calf pairs in a shallow river estuary in the High Arctic. (Photo credit: Greg O’Corry-Crowe and Cortney Watt, Arctic Whale Research Program – FAU/DFO)
Alaska lawmakers, Gov. Mike Dunleavy, staffers, pages, families and more gathered in the Capitol in Juneau for the start of the session.
By Marc Lester
Updated: 16 minutes ago Published: 28 minutes ago
Sens. Scott Kawasaki (D-Fairbanks), George Rauscher (R-Sutton), Robert Yundt (R-Wasilla), and Elvi Gray-Jackson (D-Anchorage) talk in the entryway to the Senate floor. The Alaska Legislature began its session at the Alaska State Capitol in Juneau on Tuesday, January 20, 2026. (Marc Lester / ADN)
JUNEAU — The Alaska Legislature began its session at the Alaska State Capitol in Juneau on Tuesday. Here’s a look inside the halls and chambers in photos.
[ Legislative session begins with planned vote on overriding Gov. Dunleavy’s veto of revenue bill]
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Reps. Donna Mears, D-Anchorage, left, and Mike Prax, R-North Pole, right, deliver the ceremonial news that the House is ready for official business to Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy, center. (Marc Lester / ADN) Sen. Löki Tobin, D-Anchorage, right, speaks at a Senate Majority news conference. (Marc Lester / ADN) Senate page Megan Harden carries a glockenspiel to several floors of the Alaska State Capitol, a signal for the body to convene. (Marc Lester / ADN) Members of the House Minority gather for a photo. (Marc Lester / ADN) Jeff Turner, spokesperson for Gov. Mike Dunleavy, speaks with Sen. Bert Stedman, R-Sitka, in a hall of the Alaska State Capitol. (Marc Lester / ADN) Bindi Nelson, 1, is held up by her mother, Sierra Nelson, during introductions in the Alaska House. Bindi is the daughter of new House Rep. Garret Nelson, R-Sutton, and Sierra is his wife. (Marc Lester / ADN) Rep. Alyse Galvin, of Anchorage, ducks under a conversation between Reps. Calvin Schrage of Anchorage, left, and Jeremy Bynum, R-Ketchikan. (Marc Lester / ADN) House Speaker Bryce Edgmon, I-Dillingham, answers question from media members before the session officially begins. (Marc Lester / ADN) Reps. Nellie Unangiq Jimmie, D-Toksook Bay, and Robyn Niayuq Frier, D-Utqiagvik, talk in front of House Speaker Bryce Edgmon, I-Dillingham. (Marc Lester / ADN) Reps. Sara Hannan, D-Juneau, and Donna Mears, D-Anchorage, speak on the House floor during an at-ease. (Marc Lester / ADN) Reps. Ashley Carrick, D-Fairbanks, Jamie Allard, R-Eagle River, and Kevin McCabe, R-Big Lake, talk on the House floor. (Marc Lester / ADN) Sen. George Rauscher, R-Sutton, receives a flower before entering the Senate Chamber. (Marc Lester / ADN) House Speaker Bryce Edgmon, I-Dillingham, talks with Sens. Matt Claman, D-Anchorage, and Cathy Tilton, R-Anchorage, in a Capitol hallway. (Marc Lester / ADN) Reps. Dan Saddler, R-Eagle River, and Louise Stutes, R-Kodiak, talk during a break in the House. (Marc Lester / ADN) Senate Majority Leader Cathy Giessel, R-Anchorage, laughs during a news conference. (Marc Lester / ADN) Afternoon light brightens the Butrovich Room at the Alaska State Capitol. (Marc Lester / ADN) Reps. Genevieve Mina, D-Anchorage, and Rebecca Himschoot of Sitka, talk on the way to a House Majority caucus meeting. (Marc Lester / ADN) Senate page Isabell Braun places flowers at the front of the Senate Chamber before the session officially begins. (Marc Lester / ADN) Sen. Bill Wielechowski, D-Anchorage, speaks with colleagues at a Senate Majority news conference. (Marc Lester / ADN) Rep. Justin Ruffridge, R-Soldotna, left, listens in the House. (Marc Lester / ADN) Rep. Elexie Moore, R-Wasilla, talks with Minority Leader DeLena Johnson, R-Palmer, on the House floor. (Marc Lester / ADN) Sen. Jesse Bjorkman, R-Nikiski, walks out of the Senate chamber with his son, Blake, 10, who served as a guest page for the first day of the session. (Marc Lester / ADN)
Marc Lester
Marc Lester is a multimedia journalist for Anchorage Daily News. Contact him at mlester@adn.com.
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (KTUU) – The legacy of one of America’s most prominent civil rights leaders was on everyone’s mind Monday as Alaska communities gathered to honor Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
A multicultural presentation at East High School celebrated the values King fought for, bringing together community leaders, dancers, martial artists, and musicians for a program designed to reflect his enduring impact.
“It is so important to continue to promote justice, which was really what Dr. Martin Luther King was all about,” said Celeste Hodge Growden, president of the Alaska Black Caucus. “Again, justice, equity, equality, those things that might not be as present as they once were.”
While King may not have visited the Last Frontier, the rights he fought for extend to the 49th state. Alaska’s Civil Rights Office within the Department of Transportation continues his work today.
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Civil rights work continues in Alaska
“I like to be a voice for those people that don’t like to speak up,” said Robespierre Howard of the Civil Rights Office at the Alaska Department of Transportation. “And a lot of times, if you look at the cultural differences up here, the state of Alaska is quite different from the lower 48.”
King’s work ultimately led to the Civil Rights Act of 1964, still upheld in part by the Civil Rights Office of the Alaska Department of Transportation.
“Our mission is to promote fair[ness] and equity, we want to ensure that everybody has the same opportunities to work and bid on federally funded projects,” said Zhenia Peterson of the Civil Rights Office at the Alaska Department of Transportation.
Considering King was thrust into national fame during the Montgomery Bus Boycott of 1955, the Civil Rights movement has long been tied to transportation.
“Everyone should have opportunities to work, live, play, be able to use our roads just as much as anybody else,” Peterson said.
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Message of hope continues
It’s a road Alaska is still traveling.
“Everyone deserves, you know, to be treated fairly, no matter what,” Howard said. “That’s just the bottom line. We’re, at the end of the day, we’re all people.”
The message from today’s celebration emphasized the importance of maintaining hope and community unity.
“We cannot give up hope. We must keep hope alive,” Hodge Growden said. “And I think, again, events like this that bring us together as a community are positive messaging. And that’s something we need more of.”
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