Log in to hire Katie

Katie Orlinsky

Visual Storyteller & Contributing Photographer
    
Vanishing Caribou
Public Project
Vanishing Caribou
Copyright Katie Orlinsky 2024
Date of Work Apr 2020 - Ongoing
Updated Nov 2023
Topics Spotlight
Caribou are the North American cousins of an animal we have all heard of, reindeer. The difference between them is about 7,000 years of reindeer domestication across Europe and Russia. North American Caribou on the other hand, are as wild an animal as they come. Today they exist only in Alaska and Canada, but two centuries ago there were hundreds of thousands of caribou as far south as Maine. Over time they lost their range and went extinct in the lower 48, but up in Alaska and Northern Canada was a different story. Up until 20 years ago there were still vast Arctic caribou herds numbering close to 5 million.  

However over the last 2 decades, Arctic caribou populations have been in shocking decline, going from a total of 5 million animals to roughly 2 million and falling. There hasn’t been a disappearance of so many large land mammals in such a short period of time since the American bison. It’s an enormous loss that threatens to put even more pressure on the fragile ecosystem of the Arctic, as well as the indigenous communitiesacross Alaska and Canada that have depended on caribou not only for food security, but also culturally and spiritually, for thousands of years.

As scientists in Alaska and Canada scramble to find answers, with everything from climate change, industrial development, predation, disease, and shifts in hunting practices seen as possible causes for caribou decline, we must look not only to science to understand what is happening to caribou, but to the people who know them best.

“Vanishing Caribou” is a story as much about caribou as it is about the people who have lived with and depended upon caribou for millennia- like the Nunamiut community of Anaktuvuk Pass, Alaska, the Tlicho Tribe in Northwest Territories, Canada, the Neets'aii Gwichin community of Arctic Village, Alaska, the Inupiat village of Ambler, Alaska and the West Moberly and Saulteau First Nations in British Columbia, Canada. Many of these communities are also part of a growing movement of community conservation efforts to preserve landscapes, return ecological stewardship to indigenous people and save caribou species.
4,272

Also by Katie Orlinsky —

Project

The Gila Wilderness

Katie Orlinsky
Project

Newtok, a new beginning

Katie Orlinsky
Project

Mongolia Dzud

Katie Orlinsky
Project

The Last Hunt

Katie Orlinsky / Alaska
Project

1,000 Miles

Katie Orlinsky
Project

Children do not migrate, they flee

Katie Orlinsky / Guatemala Mexico
Project

Chasing Winter (in progress)

Katie Orlinsky / Alaska
Project

Landing Page

Katie Orlinsky
Project

The Third Gender

Katie Orlinsky / Oaxaca
Project

The Conflict in Oaxaca

Katie Orlinsky / Oaxaca, Mexico
Project

Cassandro

Katie Orlinsky
Project

Jerusalem Journal

Katie Orlinsky / Jerusalem
Project

Gaza in Limbo

Katie Orlinsky / Gaza
Project

El Terremoto

Katie Orlinsky / Chile
Project

Life on the Tracks: Central American Migration in Mexico

Katie Orlinsky / Mexico
Project

The Women's War in Mali

Katie Orlinsky / Mali
Project

The Aqualillies

Katie Orlinsky / Los Angeles, California
Project

The Juarez Women's Prison

Katie Orlinsky / Ciudad Juarez
Project

Guerrero Vigilantes

Katie Orlinsky / Guerrero, Mexico
Project

Innocence Assassinated: Living in Mexico's Drug War

Katie Orlinsky / Mexico
Vanishing Caribou by Katie Orlinsky
Sign-up for
For more access