{"title":"促进当地社区对生态的理解和参与","authors":"Lauren McGrath","doi":"10.1002/fee.2681","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>While growing up in the forests and fields of northeastern Pennsylvania, I spent time with some of the best homegrown naturalists in the country. Anglers, hunters, and trackers taught me firsthand how to look at nature, as they themselves had been instructed by previous generations – and I was gifted with taxonomic keys for identifying plants and wildlife, which sparked what would be a lifelong desire to understand the natural world. It was not until after I left rural Pennsylvania and found my way into higher educational spaces when my “formal” introduction to ecology started.</p><p>But while I continued on an ecologist's path I began to repeatedly ask myself an important question: “<i>Do I belong here?</i>” The further I became involved in my research and schooling, the more I felt the need to adopt scholarly language, at the expense of being able to speak to the community of naturalists in the forests and fields where I grew up. As I pursued my degrees, I delved deeper into ecology until it was all I could see. It was not until after graduating with my master's degree, when I began work at a small nonprofit land trust, that I realized I had become disconnected from the sense of wonder that had first drawn me to this discipline. Bogged down by the constant news of habitat loss due to development, the loss of protections for sensitive ecosystems, and the brutality of climate-change-driven disasters, I questioned the impact of my efforts. If I were to key myself out in my professional landscape, I would not know where I belonged.</p><p>I have met many scientists pursuing critical ecological questions who feel either separated from the impacts of their work or unwelcome in decision-making circles where their voices are desperately needed. Ecologists are trained to identify, to question, and to probe relationships in nature, but how many of us learn the ways to share that information with a wide public audience? How can we bridge the divide between the rigors of scientific research and the broad discussions of policy or application of theory to the natural places we love? In my experience, the answer is straightforward: first listen, understand the social context, then share.</p><p>In my transition from academia to a nonprofit I was forced to reckon with a painful reality: my degrees in science are effectively in a language that the people in my local community do not speak. Only by recentering on my community's needs was I able to understand where my work was necessary: helping residents in local watersheds build emotional connections with their neighboring streams. These people did not feel passionate about the population dynamics of stream insects or patterns in eel migrations; instead, they cared about the danger of their homes flooding and the safety of their children from potentially polluted waters. It is my responsibility to meet community members where they live and ensure they feel welcome where discussions about water resources are taking place.</p><p>As a community of ecologists, we must continue to adjust our communication, to create spaces where all people belong. In shifting from leading conversations to listening to concerns, I regained my lost sense of connection to the natural world. I began to share with my community as the naturalists of my youth had shared with me: we went outside and got wet and dirty. No pretext, no expectations, and no jargon, just a shared sense of discovery and wonder and growing trust.</p><p>I joined the Darby Creek Valley Association, a local watershed organization, to train residents as community scientists. What happened was remarkable – the community scientists who collect water chemistry data began making their own discoveries within their stream system. They developed a connection to their sample sites and began advocating for better land development strategies in their neighborhoods. They even started to feel more comfortable sharing their observations and knowledge of their communities’ needs in spaces previously reserved for scientists and decision makers.</p><p>Ecological research is critical to our collective future but without finding ways to share these lessons with a broader audience our scientific impact is diminished. We shortchange ourselves by not listening to the residents of the communities in which we work and live. Increasing local scientific literacy helped my community and, in so doing, helped me rediscover my passion for ecology and promote local action to conserve the precious ecosystems on which my community relies.</p>","PeriodicalId":171,"journal":{"name":"Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment","volume":"21 9","pages":"403"},"PeriodicalIF":10.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-11-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Fostering ecological understanding in and engagement with local communities\",\"authors\":\"Lauren McGrath\",\"doi\":\"10.1002/fee.2681\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>While growing up in the forests and fields of northeastern Pennsylvania, I spent time with some of the best homegrown naturalists in the country. Anglers, hunters, and trackers taught me firsthand how to look at nature, as they themselves had been instructed by previous generations – and I was gifted with taxonomic keys for identifying plants and wildlife, which sparked what would be a lifelong desire to understand the natural world. It was not until after I left rural Pennsylvania and found my way into higher educational spaces when my “formal” introduction to ecology started.</p><p>But while I continued on an ecologist's path I began to repeatedly ask myself an important question: “<i>Do I belong here?</i>” The further I became involved in my research and schooling, the more I felt the need to adopt scholarly language, at the expense of being able to speak to the community of naturalists in the forests and fields where I grew up. As I pursued my degrees, I delved deeper into ecology until it was all I could see. It was not until after graduating with my master's degree, when I began work at a small nonprofit land trust, that I realized I had become disconnected from the sense of wonder that had first drawn me to this discipline. Bogged down by the constant news of habitat loss due to development, the loss of protections for sensitive ecosystems, and the brutality of climate-change-driven disasters, I questioned the impact of my efforts. If I were to key myself out in my professional landscape, I would not know where I belonged.</p><p>I have met many scientists pursuing critical ecological questions who feel either separated from the impacts of their work or unwelcome in decision-making circles where their voices are desperately needed. Ecologists are trained to identify, to question, and to probe relationships in nature, but how many of us learn the ways to share that information with a wide public audience? How can we bridge the divide between the rigors of scientific research and the broad discussions of policy or application of theory to the natural places we love? In my experience, the answer is straightforward: first listen, understand the social context, then share.</p><p>In my transition from academia to a nonprofit I was forced to reckon with a painful reality: my degrees in science are effectively in a language that the people in my local community do not speak. Only by recentering on my community's needs was I able to understand where my work was necessary: helping residents in local watersheds build emotional connections with their neighboring streams. These people did not feel passionate about the population dynamics of stream insects or patterns in eel migrations; instead, they cared about the danger of their homes flooding and the safety of their children from potentially polluted waters. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
当我在宾夕法尼亚州东北部的森林和田野里长大时,我和这个国家一些最优秀的本土博物学家在一起。钓鱼者、猎人和追踪者第一手教会了我如何看待自然,就像他们自己被前几代人所教导的那样——我被赋予了识别植物和野生动物的分类钥匙,这激发了我一生了解自然世界的愿望。直到我离开宾夕法尼亚州农村,进入高等教育领域后,我才开始“正式”介绍生态学。但是,当我继续走生态学家的道路时,我开始反复问自己一个重要的问题:“我属于这里吗。在攻读学位的过程中,我深入研究生态学,直到它成为我所能看到的。直到硕士毕业后,当我开始在一家小型非营利土地信托基金工作时,我才意识到我已经与最初吸引我进入这门学科的惊奇感脱节了。由于发展导致栖息地丧失、敏感生态系统失去保护以及气候变化引发的灾难的残酷性,不断有消息传出,我对此感到困惑,我质疑自己的努力所产生的影响。如果我把自己关在我的职业生涯中,我就不知道自己属于哪里。我遇到过许多研究关键生态问题的科学家,他们要么觉得自己与工作的影响分离,要么在迫切需要他们声音的决策圈子里不受欢迎。生态学家受过识别、质疑和探索自然关系的训练,但我们中有多少人学会了与广大公众分享这些信息的方法?我们如何才能弥合严格的科学研究与广泛讨论政策或将理论应用于我们热爱的自然环境之间的鸿沟?根据我的经验,答案很简单:首先倾听,了解社会背景,然后分享。在我从学术界过渡到非营利组织的过程中,我不得不面对一个痛苦的现实:我的科学学位实际上是用当地社区的人不会说的语言获得的。只有重新关注我所在社区的需求,我才能理解我的工作在哪里是必要的:帮助当地流域的居民与邻近的溪流建立情感联系。这些人对溪流昆虫的种群动态或鳗鱼迁徙的模式并不感兴趣;相反,他们关心的是家被洪水淹没的危险,以及孩子在潜在污染水域中的安全。我有责任在他们居住的地方会见社区成员,并确保他们在讨论水资源时感到受欢迎。作为一个生态学家社区,我们必须继续调整我们的沟通,创造所有人都属于的空间。从引导对话转向倾听担忧,我重新找回了与自然世界失去的联系感。我开始与我的社区分享,就像我年轻时的博物学家与我分享的那样:我们走到外面,浑身又湿又脏。没有借口,没有期望,也没有行话,只有共同的发现感、惊奇感和不断增长的信任。我加入了当地的分水岭组织Darby Creek Valley Association,将居民培训为社区科学家。发生的事情很了不起——收集水化学数据的社区科学家开始在他们的水系中做出自己的发现。他们建立了与样本点的联系,并开始倡导在他们的社区制定更好的土地开发战略。他们甚至开始觉得在以前为科学家和决策者保留的空间里分享他们对社区需求的观察和知识更舒服了。生态研究对我们的集体未来至关重要,但如果不想办法与更广泛的受众分享这些教训,我们的科学影响力就会减弱。我们欺骗自己,不听我们工作和生活的社区居民的话。提高当地的科学素养有助于我所在的社区,在这样做的过程中,帮助我重新发现对生态的热情,并促进当地采取行动,保护我所在社区所依赖的宝贵生态系统。
Fostering ecological understanding in and engagement with local communities
While growing up in the forests and fields of northeastern Pennsylvania, I spent time with some of the best homegrown naturalists in the country. Anglers, hunters, and trackers taught me firsthand how to look at nature, as they themselves had been instructed by previous generations – and I was gifted with taxonomic keys for identifying plants and wildlife, which sparked what would be a lifelong desire to understand the natural world. It was not until after I left rural Pennsylvania and found my way into higher educational spaces when my “formal” introduction to ecology started.
But while I continued on an ecologist's path I began to repeatedly ask myself an important question: “Do I belong here?” The further I became involved in my research and schooling, the more I felt the need to adopt scholarly language, at the expense of being able to speak to the community of naturalists in the forests and fields where I grew up. As I pursued my degrees, I delved deeper into ecology until it was all I could see. It was not until after graduating with my master's degree, when I began work at a small nonprofit land trust, that I realized I had become disconnected from the sense of wonder that had first drawn me to this discipline. Bogged down by the constant news of habitat loss due to development, the loss of protections for sensitive ecosystems, and the brutality of climate-change-driven disasters, I questioned the impact of my efforts. If I were to key myself out in my professional landscape, I would not know where I belonged.
I have met many scientists pursuing critical ecological questions who feel either separated from the impacts of their work or unwelcome in decision-making circles where their voices are desperately needed. Ecologists are trained to identify, to question, and to probe relationships in nature, but how many of us learn the ways to share that information with a wide public audience? How can we bridge the divide between the rigors of scientific research and the broad discussions of policy or application of theory to the natural places we love? In my experience, the answer is straightforward: first listen, understand the social context, then share.
In my transition from academia to a nonprofit I was forced to reckon with a painful reality: my degrees in science are effectively in a language that the people in my local community do not speak. Only by recentering on my community's needs was I able to understand where my work was necessary: helping residents in local watersheds build emotional connections with their neighboring streams. These people did not feel passionate about the population dynamics of stream insects or patterns in eel migrations; instead, they cared about the danger of their homes flooding and the safety of their children from potentially polluted waters. It is my responsibility to meet community members where they live and ensure they feel welcome where discussions about water resources are taking place.
As a community of ecologists, we must continue to adjust our communication, to create spaces where all people belong. In shifting from leading conversations to listening to concerns, I regained my lost sense of connection to the natural world. I began to share with my community as the naturalists of my youth had shared with me: we went outside and got wet and dirty. No pretext, no expectations, and no jargon, just a shared sense of discovery and wonder and growing trust.
I joined the Darby Creek Valley Association, a local watershed organization, to train residents as community scientists. What happened was remarkable – the community scientists who collect water chemistry data began making their own discoveries within their stream system. They developed a connection to their sample sites and began advocating for better land development strategies in their neighborhoods. They even started to feel more comfortable sharing their observations and knowledge of their communities’ needs in spaces previously reserved for scientists and decision makers.
Ecological research is critical to our collective future but without finding ways to share these lessons with a broader audience our scientific impact is diminished. We shortchange ourselves by not listening to the residents of the communities in which we work and live. Increasing local scientific literacy helped my community and, in so doing, helped me rediscover my passion for ecology and promote local action to conserve the precious ecosystems on which my community relies.
期刊介绍:
Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment is a publication by the Ecological Society of America that focuses on the significance of ecology and environmental science in various aspects of research and problem-solving. The journal covers topics such as biodiversity conservation, ecosystem preservation, natural resource management, public policy, and other related areas.
The publication features a range of content, including peer-reviewed articles, editorials, commentaries, letters, and occasional special issues and topical series. It releases ten issues per year, excluding January and July. ESA members receive both print and electronic copies of the journal, while institutional subscriptions are also available.
Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment is highly regarded in the field, as indicated by its ranking in the 2021 Journal Citation Reports by Clarivate Analytics. The journal is ranked 4th out of 174 in ecology journals and 11th out of 279 in environmental sciences journals. Its impact factor for 2021 is reported as 13.789, which further demonstrates its influence and importance in the scientific community.