Literature DB >> 28249740

Bridging science and traditional knowledge to assess cumulative impacts of stressors on ecosystem health.

Chrystal S Mantyka-Pringle1, Timothy D Jardine2, Lori Bradford3, Lalita Bharadwaj4, Andrew P Kythreotis5, Jennifer Fresque-Baxter6, Erin Kelly7, Gila Somers8, Lorne E Doig9, Paul D Jones10, Karl-Erich Lindenschmidt11.   

Abstract

Cumulative environmental impacts driven by anthropogenic stressors lead to disproportionate effects on indigenous communities that are reliant on land and water resources. Understanding and counteracting these effects requires knowledge from multiple sources. Yet the combined use of Traditional Knowledge (TK) and Scientific Knowledge (SK) has both technical and philosophical hurdles to overcome, and suffers from inherently imbalanced power dynamics that can disfavour the very communities it intends to benefit. In this article, we present a 'two-eyed seeing' approach for co-producing and blending knowledge about ecosystem health by using an adapted Bayesian Belief Network for the Slave River and Delta region in Canada's Northwest Territories. We highlight how bridging TK and SK with a combination of field data, interview transcripts, existing models, and expert judgement can address key questions about ecosystem health when considerable uncertainty exists. SK indicators (e.g., bird counts, mercury in fish, water depth) were graded as moderate, whereas TK indicators (e.g., bird usage, fish aesthetics, changes to water flow) were graded as being poor in comparison to the past. SK indicators were predominantly spatial (i.e., comparing to other locations) while the TK indicators were predominantly temporal (i.e., comparing across time). After being populated by 16 experts (local harvesters, Elders, governmental representatives, and scientists) using both TK and SK, the model output reported low probabilities that the social-ecological system is healthy as it used to be. We argue that it is novel and important to bridge TK and SK to address the challenges of environmental change such as the cumulative impacts of multiple stressors on ecosystems and the services they provide. This study presents a critical social-ecological tool for widening the evidence-base to a more holistic understanding of the system dynamics of multiple environmental stressors in ecosystems and for developing more effective knowledge-inclusive partnerships between indigenous communities, researchers and policy decision-makers. This represents new transformational empirical insights into how wider knowledge discourses can contribute to more effective adaptive co-management governance practices and solutions for the resilience and sustainability of ecosystems in Northern Canada and other parts of the world with strong indigenous land tenure.
Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Adaptive co-management; Bayesian belief network; Integration; Multiple stressors; Social-ecological systems; Traditional knowledge

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28249740     DOI: 10.1016/j.envint.2017.02.008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Environ Int        ISSN: 0160-4120            Impact factor:   9.621


  5 in total

1.  Factors Contributing to the Decline of Traditional Practices in Communities from the Gwallek-Kedar area, Kailash Sacred Landscape, Nepal.

Authors:  Kishor Atreya; Dipesh Pyakurel; Krishna Singh Thagunna; Laxmi Dutt Bhatta; Yadav Uprety; Ram Prasad Chaudhary; Bishwa Nath Oli; Sagar Kumar Rimal
Journal:  Environ Manage       Date:  2018-02-27       Impact factor: 3.266

2.  How is Etuaptmumk/Two-Eyed Seeing characterized in Indigenous health research? A scoping review.

Authors:  Sophie I G Roher; Ziwa Yu; Debbie H Martin; Anita C Benoit
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-07-20       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  Bayesian Network Applications for Sustainable Holistic Water Resources Management: Modeling Opportunities for South Africa.

Authors:  Indrani Hazel Govender; Ullrika Sahlin; Gordon C O'Brien
Journal:  Risk Anal       Date:  2021-08-02       Impact factor: 4.302

4.  Understanding rivers and their social relations: A critical step to advance environmental water management.

Authors:  Elizabeth P Anderson; Sue Jackson; Rebecca E Tharme; Michael Douglas; Joseph E Flotemersch; Margreet Zwarteveen; Chicu Lokgariwar; Mariana Montoya; Alaka Wali; Gail T Tipa; Timothy D Jardine; Julian D Olden; Lin Cheng; John Conallin; Barbara Cosens; Chris Dickens; Dustin Garrick; David Groenfeldt; Jane Kabogo; Dirk J Roux; Albert Ruhi; Angela H Arthington
Journal:  WIREs Water       Date:  2019       Impact factor: 6.139

5.  Assessing the Cumulative Social Effects of Projects: Lessons from Canadian Hydroelectric Development.

Authors:  Lauren M Arnold; Kevin Hanna; Bram Noble; Sarah E Gergel; William Nikolakis
Journal:  Environ Manage       Date:  2022-03-25       Impact factor: 3.644

  5 in total

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