Two people walking on a island at a large slant

Discover an isolated Alaska island where walruses sing

Visitors to this dot of land in the Bering Sea find music from a surprising source.

Field technicians Margaret Archibald and Matthew Lorhstorfer take a daily walk around Alaska’s Walrus Islands State Game Sanctuary to monitor the wildlife. The beach below is filled with male Pacific walruses. The sanctuary, established in 1960, is open to adventurous travelers for a few months a year.
Story and photographs byAcacia Johnson
October 15, 2021
20 min read

The first rays of sun are breaking over the tundra cliffs, the air is alive with the cries of wheeling seabirds, and from the open sea, the pale forms of swimming walruses are approaching the shore below. Their tusks draw crisp white lines through the black water, their breath rising in golden puffs. They’re chiming: a haunting, metallic song like a softly ringing bell. It’s a sound you hear with your whole body, as if you’re underwater.

This is Round Island, one of seven craggy islands in Bristol Bay that make up Alaska’s Walrus Islands State Game Sanctuary. Every summer, thousands of male Pacific walruses gather on the shores of this small, verdant island to recuperate after mating season, while the females migrate north with the receding ice edge to give birth and raise their young. 

Close up view of one walrus in dark water
A male Pacific walrus wallows in the shallow waters off Round Island, Alaska. His skin, pale in color from prolonged immersion in the icy Bering Sea, will quickly redden when he comes ashore into warmer conditions and blood returns to his extremities.

Although melting sea ice is causing widespread changes in where walruses eat and rest, Round Island has been an important resting place for walruses—known as a haul-out—for millennia. Since 1985, a state-run visitor program has allowed travelers to visit the island between May and August each year, camping in the heart of walrus habitat.

I’ve come to Round Island with my brother, a wildlife biologist, to see walruses in the wild. Despite being Alaska’s longest-running wildlife-viewing program, the island is infrequently visited. That’s partly because it’s so remote. From the Yupik village of Togiak, Round Island is a 30-mile boat ride into the exposed waters of the Bering Sea. Calm weather is essential for the crossing: after Round Island, the next point of land is Russia, over a thousand miles away.

It isn’t easy to get to Round Island, but the adventure is part of the appeal.

A sanctuary for Indigenous traditions 

The Indigenous Yupik people—who have hunted walruses sustainably here for over 5,700 years—call Round Island Qayassiq: “place to go in a kayak.” The island was closed to hunting when the sanctuary was established in 1960, but tribal leaders successfully petitioned to reopen it to subsistence harvest in 1995. 

Today, the sanctuary is co-managed by the Qayassiq Walrus Commission, representing nine Yupik communities who depend on walruses for subsistence, and who ensure that Indigenous traditional knowledge is considered. Every October, a limited hunt on Qayassiq allows these communities to continue the customs and deep ties to the environment that they’ve had since time immemorial. 

A man driving a boat, an island see through the window
Boat operator Paul Markoff approaches Round Island, in the Walrus Islands State Game Sanctuary. The two-hour journey from Togiak on the Alaskan mainland requires calm seas and good visibility.

An internship program through the Bristol Bay Native Association allows young people from nearby communities to spend time on the island and contribute to wildlife conservation. “Our traditional lifestyle is the most important thing to us,” says the organization’s Heidi Kritz.

When the Walrus Islands were established as Alaska’s first wildlife sanctuary, after decades of commercial walrus hunting, it was to protect what was then one of the last land-based haul-outs for Pacific walruses in North America. Despite weighing in at over a ton, with three-foot-long tusks and skin up to four inches thick, walruses are incredibly sensitive to disturbance. Boat traffic, loud voices, or the sound of aircraft overhead can cause them to stampede into the water, sometimes leading to injury or death for animals caught in the frenzy. If a site is disturbed frequently enough, the walruses will abandon it completely. 

(Learn how the Indigenous people on this Alaskan island cope with climate change.)

Thanks to the sanctuary’s protection, Round Island remains a seasonal home to thousands of Pacific walruses, as well as more than 250,000 nesting seabirds. As we approached by boat, after five days of waiting out stormy weather in Togiak, the island appeared almost enchanted: a steep dome of green rising from the sea, its summit shrouded in mist.

View of interior of a tent, through the door opening an island view lies outside
The cook tent in the visitor campground on Round Island. While campers are expected to be fully self-sufficient in most respects, this weatherproof tent provides a communal space in which to prep food, eat, and socialize.

Arctic biodiversity

Margaret Archibald likes to track Round Island’s seasons by which wildflowers are in bloom. One of two Alaska Department of Fish and Game technicians who staff the island each summer, she greets our boat wearing black jeans and a sweatshirt, her auburn hair tousled under a baseball cap. 

In six seasons on the island, she’s studied its ecosystem so closely that she’s labeled wildflowers with tiny handmade signs. Cuckooflower. Arctic violet. Now, in July, the whorled lousewort blooms: a magenta, orchid-like flower curling up delicately along the walking trails where we first step ashore. “I apologize in advance if I’m a chatterbox,” Archibald says. “You two are the first visitors we’ve had in weeks.”

When our boat arrives, the landing beach is packed with sleeping walruses. To avoid disturbing them, we unload a short distance away, keeping our voices low. As Archibald helps us carry our gear to the campground, the air buzzes with the chirps of savannah sparrows and hermit thrushes. Green tundra grasslands, thick with wildflowers, stretch along the island’s cliffy shore; surprisingly lush for being, technically, part of the Arctic tundra biome.

After pitching our tent, we join Archibald on her daily rounds. It’s her job to maintain the island’s trail system, to oversee the visitor program, and to enforce the three-mile zone that protects the island from boat traffic and commercial fishing. 

Walrus in water seen from above in early morning golden light
At sunrise, Pacific walruses approach the shore to join a haul-out on Main Beach, Round Island. Since the sanctuary was established in 1960, a summer program allows small groups of visitors to camp on the island and observe walruses.
Pink flowers and green grass
Whorled lousewort blooms along a trail on Round Island. The Arctic coastal climate, as well as abundant fertilization from nesting seabirds, make the island a phenomenal place for wildflowers.
Puffin on a rock flapping his wings
A horned puffin perches on a cliff near its nest on Round Island, Alaska. The Walrus Islands are an important breeding area for seabirds, which nest on its many cliffs.
Red fox walking through tall grass
A red fox wanders on Round Island, Alaska. Despite the island’s remoteness, its prolific seabird cliffs make it a resource-rich habitat for foxes.
Small blue flowers and green grass
Alpine forget-me-not, the state flower of Alaska, flourishes on Round Island.
Walrus in water seen from above
Bathed in early-morning sunlight, Pacific walruses haul out on a rock on Round Island. They’re noisy creatures, filling the air with snorts, whistles, and bell-like “chimes.”

She considers her most important task to be the daily wildlife counts of walruses, seabirds, and an endangered population of Steller sea lions. Bristol Bay and its fisheries are a vital ecosystem for Alaska’s economy, and data collected about Round Island’s seabirds and marine mammals—which function as climate indicator species—are some of the region’s most consistent. As Arctic temperatures rise, she explains, what happens on Round Island provides valuable insight into what’s going on in the broader marine ecosystem.

Archibald leads us along a well-maintained trail through clifftop grasslands, pointing out good viewpoints for nesting puffins and parakeet auklets. The island’s red foxes, she says, have just given birth to kits. Then we arrive at a viewpoint for First Beach—a grassy ledge, blooming with lupine—and peer over the edge. Hundreds of walruses are piled pink onto the rocks a mere hundred feet below us. We can smell them: salty, marine, and fecund. We sit down in the grass to keep a quiet, low profile, so they’re at peace with our presence.

Camping in walrus habitat

Round Island is ideal for experienced campers accustomed to bad weather. With eight wooden tent platforms overlooking the sea, a composting outhouse, and a large cooking tent with a picnic table and a propane stove, it has more infrastructure than any other walrus viewing area in Alaska. 

One of the things that attracted me to the adventure of Round Island was its packing list, which requires a stormproof tent capable of withstanding 60-m.p.h. winds; a tent-pole repair kit; and enough food for an extra week’s stay. Campers must be prepared for rapidly changing weather. Out here, nature is in charge.

There are eight campsites on Round Island, each with a stellar view and a firm platform to anchor a tent.

Some nights, the wind blows so fiercely that it sounds as if our tent will be ripped from its platform. Other nights, it is so quiet that I can hear the walruses when I’m inside the tent: breathing, roaring, whistling, their ethereal chiming produced by air being pushed between chambers in their pharyngeal pouches. Most mornings, when I leave the tent, the wind blows in a marine mist casting the grasslands in silver, increasing the sense of a myth or a dream.

Walrus watching

Walruses are social, gregarious, and thigmotactic animals—meaning that they prefer to be in close contact with each other, tusks and all. (Orphaned baby walruses, in captivity, require constant physical contact to survive). Piled by the hundreds to rest on Round Island’s beaches, they jostle frequently for position, groaning and poking each other with their tusks when annoyed. 

Man walking onto a small white plane
The author’s brother Devin Johnson boards an air taxi from Dillingham, Alaska, to the Yupik village of Togiak, the closest community to the Walrus Islands State Game Sanctuary.
Woman scaling salmon outside in from of a house
Vivian Active fillets sockeye salmon outside the Togiak Airport Inn in Togiak, Alaska. Subsistence activities such as this are an important part of life for most residents.
Houses on the shore in pastel light see across a body of water
The village of Togiak as seen from the boat returning from Round Island, Alaska. Located on the shore of Bristol Bay, this community of roughly 800 people—primarily Yupik—is a gateway to the Walrus Islands State Game Sanctuary.

When they’re out at sea, they eat benthic invertebrates such as clams: an average of a hundred pounds of them a day, unearthed from the ocean floor with their sensitive whiskers called vibrissae, and consumed by suction, leaving the shells behind.

For hours each day, my brother and I wander between the island’s numerous overlooks, watching the walruses. They’re graceful swimmers, almost dancerly, when they approach the beaches from the sea; so pale pink from immersion in the cold water that they appear almost white. Then they lumber ashore, all blubber and tusks, using their foreflippers to haul their jiggling bodies across the smooth, dark rocks. As they join the hundreds of others piled onshore, their skin will turn a dusky, rosy pink as blood flows to their extremities to cool them down.

(Here’s how to see whales and glaciers at this isolated Alaskan national park.)

“Walrus have evolved to be this unique, amazing, specialized clam-eater,” Archibald laughs as we chat on her cabin deck one afternoon. She explains they are a keystone species, helping to shape the entire biotic community they live in. When they forage on the sea floor, they churn up vast quantities of nutrient-rich sediment, providing food for smaller organisms up to seabirds, large fish, seals, and even polar bears further north. Despite their vital role in the ecosystem, and their vulnerability to melting sea ice, they often fall low on the priority list for conservation. 

Aerial view of rivers cutting through green landscape
Rivers wind through the Togiak National Wildlife Refuge, 4.7 million acres of protected land between Kuskokwim Bay and Bristol Bay.

Walruses are hard to track, and existing data has been deemed insufficient to classify them as endangered. In 2014, Round Island lost all its state general funding, despite needing relatively few resources. Today, its program has continued thanks to grants and donors, including a live walrus webcam on Explore.org.

Archibald says that experiencing walruses in person is one of the best things that can happen for their conservation. “Once people come here and see them, they’re going to forever be more aware of walrus habitat—and the fact that walrus are real animals,” she says. “They’re not a sticker or an emoji.”

The walruses we see are beautiful, complex, individual animals. I learn to estimate their age via their skin, which forms into thick, textured nodules called “bosses” as the animal grows older. Some of their tusks are striated or broken off into ivory stumps. Despite their size, they’re shy, and easily spooked if one of us humans moves too quickly. When they greet each other in the water, they gently touch whiskered snouts.

Walrus hauled out on rocks below, seen through golden light
The sun rises over a group of Pacific walruses on Round Island. Walruses prefer to be in physical contact with other animals—even if that means frequently jostling, tusks and all, for the best spot on the beach.
A man in a small dinky paddles to a larger boat
Departing from Round Island, Devin Johnson (the writer/photographer’s brother) rows to shore to shuttle more gear to Paul Markoff’s boat. Because the boat itself cannot come all the way to shore, arrivals and departures from the island require exceptionally calm sea conditions.

Talking to Archibald makes me see walruses with fresh eyes. She tells the story of a tiny, lost walrus calf being cared for by the older males, even hitching a piggyback ride; or aging walruses being tended to by younger ones. Watching them—their different colors, their battle scars, their antics—reminds me that all animals are individuals, with personalities, emotions, and empathy.

A conservation relationship

On our last morning on the island, the sky clears after days of mist. I get up in the nautical twilight to climb the steep Traverse Trail along sloping tundra cliffs to a craggy peninsula where seabirds nest. When I look back at camp from high on the hillside, under the light of a lone, fat star, the blue-hued grassland below ripples with the foundations of ancient homes. I think of what Kritz told me: that spending time on these traditional lands as an intern was a healing experience. I wonder if people who walked Qayassiq thousands of years ago were similarly awestruck.

Walrus hauled out on rocks, seen from above at Sunrise
At close to midnight, Pacific walruses bask in the sunset on First Beach, Round Island.

It’s high tide when the sun breaks over the horizon, but even the thin strip of exposed beach below is piled high with walruses glinting amber in the light. More wallow offshore, chiming softly as they wait for space to join the crowd. Thousands of seabirds cycle above; a fox runs by, dripping with morning dew, a crush of black feathers in its mouth. I think of how easy it is, in a place like this, to understand how everything is connected.

It’s not easy to get to Round Island. Committing to the journey helps the walruses and the people who depend on them. It keeps the place staffed and protected. Walruses may not be an endangered species yet, but they are worthy of attention and conservation. As the climate changes and walruses across the Arctic are forced to forego their ice floes for more land-based haul-outs, the structure of the marine ecosystem itself may be changing. Walruses may turn out to be a more important part of the picture than we think.

Acacia Johnson is a photographer and writer from Alaska. Follow her work on Instagram

A version of this story appears in the April 2022 issue of National Geographic magazine.

Get smart, have fun

with the NAT GEO KIDS or LITTLE KIDS subscription.
Summer Sale: Annual subscriptions starting at just $24!