| Literature DB >> 30364057 |
Lawrence Duffy1, La'Ona De Wilde1, Katie Spellman2, Kriya Dunlap3, Bonita Dainowski3, Susan McCullough4, Bret Luick5, Mary van Muelken1.
Abstract
River watersheds are among the most complex terrestrial features in Alaska, performing valuable ecosystem functions and providing services for human society. Rivers are vital to both estuarine and aquatic biota and play important roles in biogeochemical cycles and physical processes. The functions of watersheds have been used as vulnerability indicators for ecosystem and socioeconomic resilience. Despite a long history of human activity, the Yukon River has not received the holistic and interdisciplinary attention given to the other great American river systems. By using hypothesis-based monitoring of key watershed functions, we can gain insight to regime-shifting stresses such as fire, toxins, and invasive species development. Coupling adaptive risk management practices involving stakeholders with place-based education, especially contaminants and nutrition related, can maintain resilience within communities. The Yukon watershed provides a broadscale opportunity for communities to monitor the environment, manage resources, and contribute to stewardship policy formation. Monitoring keystone species and community activities, such as citizen science, are critical first steps to following changes to resiliency throughout the Yukon watershed. Creating a policy environment that encourages local experimentation and innovation contributes to resilience maintenance during development-imposed stress.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30364057 PMCID: PMC6188583 DOI: 10.1155/2018/8421513
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Scientifica (Cairo) ISSN: 2090-908X
Figure 1Map of the Yukon River watershed. The Yukon is the third longest river in North America and the fourth largest drainage in North America. https://www.yritwc.org/yukon-river-watershed. Credit: Maryann Fidel, Yukon River Inter-Tribal Watershed Council.
Figure 2The Yukon River Watershed's footprint compared to Alaska and the United States. Credit: Laris Karklis. Yukon River Inter-Tribal Watershed Council.
Types of river resources and their value to potentially impacted stakeholders.
| Type | Definition | Examples | Stakeholders |
|---|---|---|---|
| Individual resources | Value of individual species by its trophic position | Keystone species | Natural resource trustees |
| Trophic role | Conservationist | ||
| Endangered species | Regulators | ||
| Tribal councils | |||
| Scientists | |||
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| Specific resources for individuals | Value of individual species to individual people or groups of people | Fish, game, and sport activities | Fish and game agencies |
| Wildlife for photography; birdwatching | Conservationists | ||
| Plants for religious or medicinal purposes | Businesses catering to recreationists | ||
| Tribal councils | |||
| Scientists and social scientists | |||
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| Resources for communities | Value of ecosystem to human communities | Clean water and air | Regulators |
| Habitat | Public policy-makers | ||
| Subsistence species | Coastal zone managers/Army Corps of Engineers | ||
| Tribal councils | |||
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| Intact ecosystems | Ecological, aesthetic, and existence values to people | Tundra | Environmental protection agencies (state and federal) |
| Boreal forests and rivers | NGOs and tribal councils | ||
| Rivers | |||
Potential indicators of change and variation across ecological levels.
| Ecological level | Indicators/metrics | Rationale |
|---|---|---|
| Individual species | Salmon | Common; abundant; widespread; eaten by higher trophic levels |
| Shellfish | ||
| River otter, sea otter, mink, and muskrat | Represents higher trophic levels; monitors different food webs | |
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| ||
| Populations | Colonial birds | Of interest to the public, vulnerable because they breed and feed in aquatic habitats that concentrate toxins |
| Red fox and Arctic fox | Of less interest to the public, but have circumpolar perspective | |
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| Community | Sled dogs | Of interest to the public, vulnerable because they eat what humans eat |
| Lichens and plants | Low trophic level and thus indicative of higher level effects; monitors global transport | |
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| ||
| Ecosystem | Species diversity | Of interest to the public, can be used to observe trophic dynamics |
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| Landscape | Percent habitat | Of interest to the public, used to assess quality of habitat as well as temporal changes |
Figure 3Alaskan potable water sites that are vulnerable and at risk for contamination. Credit: Maryann Fidel, Yukon River Inter-Tribal Watershed Council.
Figure 4Potential Indicators of ecosystem health.
Figure 5Resilience framework related to monitoring environmental stressors.
Figure 6Citizen science and community-based environmental monitoring contribute to socialecological resilience by building human capital, social capital, natural capital, and sense of place. Documented outcomes in each category are summarized from the review conceptualized by Spellman [58].