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Subsistence Use and Knowledge of Beaufort Salmon Populations. Courtney Carothers Assistant Professor of Fisheries School of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences University of Alaska Fairbanks. Background.
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Subsistence Use and Knowledge of Beaufort Salmon Populations Courtney CarothersAssistant Professor of FisheriesSchool of Fisheries and Ocean SciencesUniversity of Alaska Fairbanks
Background • Observations and catches of Pacific salmon increasing in Chukchi and Beaufort Sea communities [Kassam (2001), Luton (1985), and George et al. (2007)] • Directed Chinook fishery in Barrow, inc. since 2003 • Presence of Pacific salmon and small subsistence catches (pink, chum) recorded for over a century[Maguire 1988 [1852-54]; Murdoch 1891 [1884]; Stefansson 1913] • Recent shifts related to climate change? • Document local knowledge about these shifts
Pink Salmon Amaqtuuq • Along w/ chum salmon only documented salmon species spawning in Arctic coast streams • Ikpikpaq and Itkillik Rivers likely spawning sites [George et al. 2007] • Pinks taken in subsistence fishery in Elson Lagoon • Sometimes confused w/ chum or coho (v. rare) salmon
Chum Salmon Iqalugruaq • Found in coastal waters in Arctic Alaska • Spawn in Qaqulik and Utuqqaq Rivers near Pt Lay and Colville and possibly Ikpikpak River [George et al. 2007] • Chum often mistaken for coho (silver); bright silvery appearance of sea-run chum • Since late 1980s, 20+ salmon nets in Elson Lagoon
Chinook Salmon Iqalugruaq • Same Inupiat name as chum • Reflects recent occurrence? Relative unimportance? • Spawning population reported by Kugrua River (Peard Bay) [George et al. 2007]
Sockeye Salmon Inupiat Name? • Rare in North Slope waters • Number appear to be increasing on North Slope
Project Objectives • Establish strong rapport with local community residents and regional experts. • Document the current subsistence use of Beaufort Sea salmon populations in Barrow, Nuiqsut, and Kaktovik or Atqasuk. • Document the local and traditional ecological knowledge of historic and recent trends in salmon use, abundance, and distribution.
Project Objectives • Provide a description of the Inupiat context for ecological observations and appropriate uses of such knowledge. • How is knowledge of salmon shifts related to knowledge about changing ocean, coastal, river, lake, habitat, and climatic conditions. • Use spatial and ethnographic data to identify steams and coastal areas where salmon have been harvested or observed.
Theoretical Frame • Traditional ecological knowledge • TEK is a cumulative body of knowledge and beliefs, handed down through generations by cultural transmission, about the relationships of living beings (including humans) with one another and with their environment (Berkes 1993) • TEK also encompasses linguistic analyses of indigenous classification systems and perceptions of place (Basso 1996) • TEK, thus, is a combination of the cosmological, linguistic, sociological, and ritual connections to the environment (Hunn 1999)
Methods • Literature review • Comprehensive annotated bibliography on salmon use and knowledge in Beaufort Sea region • Ethnographic research • Barrow, Nuiqsut, Atqasuk/Kaktovik; local field assistants • Purposive snowball sampling • Semi-structured interviews • Recent trends in salmon distribution, subsistence and other uses, and potential spawning activity • Participatory mapping [Laurer & Aswani 2008; Kuznar & Werner 2001]
Methods • Collaborative research design – ADFG & NSB • Exploring an Emerging Subsistence Salmon Fishery in Three Chukchi Sea Communities: Point Hope, Point Lay, and Wainwright (Sverre Pedersen and Jim Simon) • Share protocol, expand range and context of observations/changes • More extensive project: genetic stock identification, quantification of household harvest
Pedersen & Simon • Compatible Methodology • Past/present annual timing of subsistence fisheries • Relative abundance through time • Historical knowledge of salmon fisheries, abundance, run-timing for each spp, gear-types and fishing practices • Map areas where fishing takes place, observations of spawning, over-wintering habitat • Changes in subsistence fisheries over last 5-10 years
Pedersen & Simon • Additional components • Household survey • Participation, amount caught, gear used, timing, location, time allocated • Genetic analysis
Data Analysis • Interview transcriptions will be coded and analyzed with Atlas.ti. • Dominant themes related to subsistence use and knowledge of salmon populations will be summarized in a synthesis report, manuscript • Geographic data collected during participatory mapping exercises will be summarized on a master map. GIS software analysis if warranted. • Regional comparison • Chukchi communities, Kotzebue Sound
Current Progress • Preliminary field visit June 2009 • Process of introduction, relationship building, and formal permissions • Literature review and annotations – Shelley Woods • Summer-Fall 2010 – Ethnographic interviews, mapping • Winter 2011 – Data analysis, follow-up visits