Personal
interviews with Alaska Natives in the Yukon River Basin provide unique insights
on climate change and its impacts, helping develop adaptation strategies for
these local communities.
The USGS
coordinated interviews with Yup'ik hunters and elders in the villages of St.
Mary's and Pitka's Point, Alaska, to document their observations of climate
change. They expressed concerns ranging from safety, such as unpredictable
weather patterns and dangerous ice conditions, to changes in plants and animals
as well as decreased availability of firewood.
"Many
climate change studies are conducted on a large scale, and there is a great
deal of uncertainty regarding how climate change will impact specific
regions," said USGS social scientist Nicole Herman-Mercer. "This
study helps address that uncertainty and really understand climate change as a
socioeconomic issue by talking directly to those with traditional and personal
environmental knowledge."
By
integrating scientific studies with indigenous observation, these multiple
forms of knowledge allow for a more comprehensive understanding of the complex
challenges posed by climate change. The indigenous knowledge encompasses
observations, lessons and stories about the environment that have been handed
down for generations, providing a long history of environmental knowledge.
These observations can also help uncover new areas for scientists to study.
The Arctic
and Subarctic are of particular interest because these high latitudes are among
the world’s first locations to begin experiencing climate change.
The most
common statement by interview participants was about warmer temperature in
recent years. It was observed to be warmer in all seasons, though most notably
in the winter months. In previous generations, winter temperatures dropped to
40 degrees Celsius below freezing, while in present times temperatures only
reach 25 C or 30 C below freezing. Moreover, in the rare case that temperatures
did drop as low as they had in the past, it was a brief cold spell, in contrast
to historic month-long cold spells.
The
considerable thinning of ice on the Yukon and Andreafsky Rivers in recent years
was the topic of several interviews. Thin river ice is a significant issue
because winter travel is mainly achieved by using the frozen rivers as a
transportation route via snow machines or sled dogs. Thinning ice shortens the
winter travel season, making it more difficult to trade goods between villages,
visit friends and relatives, or reach traditional hunting grounds. One
interview participant also discussed how the Andreafsky River, on whose banks
their village lies, no longer freezes in certain spots, and several people have drowned after falling
through the resulting holes in the ice.
The
unpredictability of weather conditions was another issue of concern, especially
since these communities rely on activities such as hunting, fishing and
gathering wild foods for their way of life. One does not want to "get
caught out in the country" when the weather suddenly changes.
Vegetation
patterns were also observed to be shifting due to the changes in seasonal
weather patterns, and this leads to increased difficulty in subsistence
activities. Interviews showed the unpredictability from year to year on whether
vegetation, particularly salmonberries, could be relied upon. Those interviewed
spoke of a change in the range of species of mammals (moose and beaver) as well
as a decrease in the number of some bird species (ptarmigan). This is of
special concern because of the important role these animals play in the
subsistence diets of Alaska Natives. Many also rely on hunting or trapping for
their livelihoods.
Participants
also discussed lower spring snowmelt flows on the Andreafsky and Yukon Rivers,
meaning less logs are flowing down the river. This hampers people's ability to
collect logs for firewood and building materials, placing a strain on an
already economically depressed region through increased heating costs and
reliance on expensive fossil fuels.
An article
on this topic was published in the journal, Human Organization. The full
article with additional quotes and observations from indigenous people is
available online.
Contact Information:
U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey
Office of Communications and Publishing
12201 Sunrise Valley Dr, MS 119
Reston, VA 20192
Phone: 303-541-3012
Phone: 703-648-6624
"Update on Current Events" – Jul 23, 2011 (Kryon channelled by Lee Carroll) - (Subjects: God, Gaia, Shift of Human Consciousness, 2012, Benevolent Design, Financial Institutes (Recession, System to Change ...), Water Cycle (Heat up, Mini Ice Ace, Oceans, Fish, Earthquakes ..), Nuclear Power Revealed, Geothermal Power, Hydro Power, Drinking Water from Seawater, No need for Oil as Much, Middle East in Peace, Persia/Iran Uprising, Muhammad, Israel, DNA, Two Dictators to fall soon, Africa, China, (Old) Souls, Species to go, Whales to Humans, Global Unity,..... etc.) - New !
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