Alaska woman fined for bringing goats onto glacier

On September 1, an Alaska woman was fined by the National Park Service for bringing domesticated goats onto the Root Glacier. The Root Glacier is located in Wrangell-St. Elias National Park outside of the city of McCarthy.

A group of women had brought two goats onto the glacier when they were confronted by a park ranger, who found them in violation of CFR 36 13.50 (g), a general and broad clause designed to protect the integrity of national parks. The fine was issued to the owner of the goats.

We reached out to the National Park Service for comment, but as of this writing we have not heard back. According to a source at Alaska Fish and Game, domesticated goats have a complicated history of spreading a disease to wild herds. The spread of the bacterium mycoplasma ovipneumoniae (M. ovi), which causes respiratory disease, has been a particular concern. Click here to read more on Fish and Game’s website about M. ovi. In 2018, the government of the Yukon Territory in Canada issued strict rules designed to separate domestic and wild populations of sheep and goats.

This story was brought to our attention by Landmine readers who were at the glacier at the time of the incident. We were not able to contact the woman who was fined. Check back for updates to the story.

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Robin
5 years ago

And…this made news…?

Matt
5 years ago

The history of domestic goats spreading pathogens to wild herds isn’t complicated…..it is nonexisistent. There isn’t one documented instance.

Fart Chance
5 years ago
Reply to  Matt

Facts to back up this assertion?

Baaaaa
5 years ago
Reply to  Matt

This is pure bunk! No reported history of spread of m. Ovi between domestic goats and wild sheep. It is propaganda from the Western Sheep Foundation hunting club. Still, the federal law is there and they should have known.

K.Kimple
5 years ago

Ummmm, the only animals in Alaska to have tested positive for M. Ovi, are wild sheep, sooooo there’s that.

K.Kimple
5 years ago
Reply to  K.Kimple

I was wrong about this, they have tested some domestic sheep and goats since the last articles I read.

Baaaaa
5 years ago
Reply to  K.Kimple

None found positive from what I have seen. Regardless m. Ovi is a transient bacteria and they have not shown any issues with Alaskan wild sheep being susceptible to it.

Brian A.
5 years ago
Reply to  K.Kimple

According to ADF&G it has been found in Dall Sheep and Caribou from the 40 Mile and Nelchina herds. Soooooo, there’s also that.

Pamela
5 years ago
Reply to  Brian A.

Also moose. They think it could’ve gotten to wild animals in the gold mining days and worked its way through the ecosystem. Now there are carriers. The only documented death of an animal contributed to M.ovi is a caribou calf that got a strain of pneumonia.

Keakuamai
5 years ago

So according to the “scientists” on here we should just wait for an outbreak to occur before enforcing the law rather than prevention?

…..there’s that

Baaaaa
5 years ago
Reply to  Keakuamai

Outbreak from what? Wild sheep and caribou intermixing and already carrying a bacteria with. O apparent susceptibility thereto? Gosh, let’s build them padded mountain tops and safety nets too. Falls kill a lot of them.

Baaaaa
5 years ago
Reply to  Keakuamai

You know what kills a lot of our wild sheep? Patrons of the Wild Sheep Foundation. That’s right: hunters.

Talkeetna
5 years ago

So why, really, does someone ‘hike’ with their goats on federal lands? It’s likely that they are trying to make a statement or create a conflict… Then quickly bring it to the press… I suspect there will be more arm waving and whining about how this person is being denied their constitutional right to bring a goat anywhere they please! MAGA!

Maureen
5 years ago
Reply to  Talkeetna

Pack animals T. I saw some years ago at Eklutna Lake.

Baaaaa
5 years ago
Reply to  Talkeetna

Pack goats. They’re a thing.

Baaaaa
5 years ago
Reply to  Talkeetna

They should have fought the law when it was under proposal. And they should have known about it and obeyed it now.

Fart Chance
5 years ago

Reporting so hard hitting it required two of you….

Carrie
5 years ago

Its not just goats that carry M.O.V.I its also carried by moose, caribou, cattle, muskox, white tail deer, mule deer, rain deer, antilope because testing is fairly new few species have been tested mostlikly many more.

Mr Curious
5 years ago

Why do you feel a need to publish this non-story ? They broke the rules, they got fined, as they should have. Why don’t you do a write up about what Rick Rydell does to earn his hefty paycheck ?