Blending Indigenous and western science: Quantifying cultural burning impacts in Karuk Aboriginal Territory

IF 4.3 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ECOLOGY Ecological Applications Pub Date : 2024-04-15 DOI:10.1002/eap.2973
Skye M. Greenler, Frank K. Lake, William Tripp, Kathy McCovey, Analisa Tripp, Leaf G. Hillman, Christopher J. Dunn, Susan J. Prichard, Paul F. Hessburg, Will Harling, John D. Bailey
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Abstract

The combined effects of Indigenous fire stewardship and lightning ignitions shaped historical fire regimes, landscape patterns, and available resources in many ecosystems globally. The resulting fire regimes created complex fire–vegetation dynamics that were further influenced by biophysical setting, disturbance history, and climate. While there is increasing recognition of Indigenous fire stewardship among western scientists and managers, the extent and purpose of cultural burning is generally absent from the landscape–fire modeling literature and our understanding of ecosystem processes and development. In collaboration with the Karuk Tribe Department of Natural Resources, we developed a transdisciplinary Monte Carlo simulation model of cultural ignition location, frequency, and timing to simulate spatially explicit cultural ignitions across a 264,399-ha landscape within Karuk Aboriginal Territory in northern California. Estimates of cultural ignition parameters were developed with Tribal members and knowledge holders using existing interviews, historical maps, ethnographies, recent ecological studies, contemporary maps, and generational knowledge. Spatial and temporal attributes of cultural burning were explicitly tied to the ecology of specific cultural resources, fuel receptivity, seasonal movement patterns, and spiritual practices. Prior to colonization, cultural burning practices were extensive across the study landscape with an estimated 6972 annual ignitions, averaging approximately 6.5 ignitions per Indigenous fire steward per year. The ignition characteristics we document align closely with data on historical fire regimes and vegetation but differ substantially from the location and timing of contemporary ignitions. This work demonstrates the importance of cultural burning for developing and maintaining the ecosystems present at the time of colonization and underscores the need to work collaboratively with Indigenous communities to restore ecocultural processes in these systems.

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融合土著科学和西方科学:量化卡鲁克原住民领地的文化焚烧影响
土著人的防火管理和闪电点火的综合影响塑造了全球许多生态系统的历史火灾机制、景观模式和可用资源。由此形成的火灾机制产生了复杂的火灾-植被动态,并受到生物物理环境、干扰历史和气候的进一步影响。虽然西方科学家和管理者越来越认可土著人的防火管理,但在景观-火灾模型文献和我们对生态系统过程和发展的理解中,却普遍缺乏对文化焚烧的范围和目的的研究。通过与卡鲁克部落自然资源部合作,我们开发了一个跨学科的蒙特卡洛文化点火位置、频率和时间模拟模型,以模拟加利福尼亚州北部卡鲁克原住民领地内 264399 公顷土地上的空间明确的文化点火。文化点火参数的估算是与部落成员和知识持有者一起,利用现有的访谈、历史地图、人种志、近期生态研究、当代地图和世代相传的知识得出的。文化焚烧的空间和时间属性明确地与特定文化资源的生态、燃料接受能力、季节性运动模式和精神习俗联系在一起。在殖民化之前,文化焚烧的做法在研究区域内非常普遍,估计每年有 6972 次点火,平均每位土著消防管理员每年约有 6.5 次点火。我们记录的点火特征与历史上的火灾机制和植被数据非常吻合,但与当代点火的地点和时间有很大不同。这项工作表明了文化焚烧对于发展和维护殖民时期的生态系统的重要性,并强调了与土著社区合作恢复这些系统中的生态文化进程的必要性。
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来源期刊
Ecological Applications
Ecological Applications 环境科学-环境科学
CiteScore
9.50
自引率
2.00%
发文量
268
审稿时长
6 months
期刊介绍: The pages of Ecological Applications are open to research and discussion papers that integrate ecological science and concepts with their application and implications. Of special interest are papers that develop the basic scientific principles on which environmental decision-making should rest, and those that discuss the application of ecological concepts to environmental problem solving, policy, and management. Papers that deal explicitly with policy matters are welcome. Interdisciplinary approaches are encouraged, as are short communications on emerging environmental challenges.
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