Beluga whale stewardship and collaborative research practices among Indigenous peoples in the Arctic

IF 1.9 4区 地球科学 Q3 ECOLOGY Polar Research Pub Date : 2021-11-19 DOI:10.33265/polar.v40.5522
K. Breton-Honeyman, H. Huntington, Mark Basterfield, Kiyo Campbell, J. Dicker, Tom Gray, Alfred E.R. Jakobsen, Frankie Jean-Gagnon, David Lee, R. Laing, L. Loseto, P. McCarney, John Noksana Jr, Tommy Palliser, Lawrence Ruben, Clayton Tartak, Joseph Townley, E. Zdor
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Beluga whales ( Delphinapterus leucas ) are an integral part of many Arctic Indigenous cultures and contribute to food security for communities from Greenland, across northern Canada and Alaska to Chukotka, Russia. Although the harvesting and stewardship practices of Indigenous peoples vary among regions and have shifted and adapted over time, central principles of respect for beluga and sharing of the harvest have remained steadfast. In addition to intra-community cooperation to harvest, process and use beluga whales, rapid environmental change in the Arctic has underscored the need for inter-re-gional communication as well as collaboration with scientists and managers to sustain beluga populations and their cultural and nutritional roles in Arctic communities. Our paper, written by the overlapping categories of researchers, hunters, and managers, first provides an overview of beluga hunting and collaborative research in seven regions of the Arctic (Greenland; Nunatsiavut, Nunavik, Nunavut, and the Inuvialuit Settlement Region, Canada; Alaska; and Chukotka). Then we present a more detailed case study of collaboration, exam-ining a recent research and management project that utilizes co-production of knowledge to address the conservation of a depleted population of beluga in Nunavik, Canada. We conclude that sustaining traditional values, establishing collaborative management efforts, the equitable inclusion of Indigenous Knowledge, and respectful and meaningful collaborations among hunters, researchers and managers are essential to sustaining healthy beluga populations and the peoples who live with and depend upon them in a time of rapid social and environmental change.
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北极土著居民的白鲸管理和合作研究实践
白鲸(Delphinapterus leucas)是许多北极土著文化的组成部分,对从格陵兰岛到加拿大北部、阿拉斯加到俄罗斯楚科奇的社区的粮食安全做出了贡献。尽管各地区土著人民的捕捞和管理做法各不相同,并且随着时间的推移而发生变化和适应,但尊重白鲸和分享收获的核心原则仍然坚定不移。除了在捕鲸、加工和利用白鲸方面的社区内部合作外,北极地区环境的快速变化强调了区域间交流以及与科学家和管理人员合作的必要性,以维持白鲸种群及其在北极社区中的文化和营养作用。我们的论文由研究人员、猎人和管理人员的重叠类别撰写,首先概述了北极七个地区(格陵兰岛;Nunatsiavut, Nunavik, Nunavut和因纽瓦柳特人定居区,加拿大;阿拉斯加;和楚科塔)。然后,我们提出了一个更详细的合作案例研究,考察了最近的一个研究和管理项目,该项目利用知识的共同生产来解决加拿大努纳维克白鲸种群枯竭的保护问题。我们的结论是,在社会和环境迅速变化的时代,维持传统价值观、建立协作管理努力、公平纳入土著知识以及猎人、研究人员和管理人员之间相互尊重和有意义的合作,对于维持健康的白鲸种群以及与白鲸生活在一起并依赖它们生活的人民至关重要。
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来源期刊
Polar Research
Polar Research 地学-地球科学综合
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
5.30%
发文量
22
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Since 1982, Polar Research has been the international, peer-reviewed journal of the Norwegian Polar Institute, Norway''s central institution for research, environmental monitoring and mapping of the polar regions. Aiming to promote the exchange of scientific knowledge about the Arctic and Antarctic across disciplinary boundaries, Polar Research serves an international community of researchers and managers. As an open-access journal, Polar Research makes its contents freely available to the general public. Original primary research papers comprise the mainstay of Polar Research. Review articles, brief research notes, letters to the editor and book reviews are also included. Special issues are published from time to time. The scope of Polar Research encompasses research in all scientific disciplines relevant to the polar regions. These include, but are not limited to, the subfields of biology, ecology, geology, oceanography, glaciology and atmospheric science. Submissions from the social sciences and those focusing on polar management and policy issues are welcome. Contributions about Antarctica are particularly encouraged.
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