Indigenous knowledge and species assessment for the Alexander Archipelago wolf: successes, challenges, and lessons learned

IF 1.9 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q3 ECOLOGY
Jeffrey J. Brooks, Sarah I. Markegard, Stephen J. Langdon, Devlin Shaag̱aw Éesh Anderstrom, Michael Gitwaayne Douville, Thomas A. George, Michael Kauish Jackson, Scott Gus'tú Jackson, Thomas Ḵaachkutí Mills, Judith Dax̠ootsú Ramos, Jon Yaanasgít Rowan, Tony Sanderson, Chuck Smythe
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Abstract

The United States Fish and Wildlife Service in Alaska, USA, conducted a species status assessment for a petition to list the Alexander Archipelago wolf (Canis lupus ligoni) under the Endangered Species Act in 2020-2022. This federal undertaking could not be adequately prepared without including the knowledge of Indigenous People who have a deep cultural connection with the subspecies. Our objective is to communicate the authoritative expertise and voice of the Indigenous People who partnered on the project by demonstrating how their knowledge contributed to the species status assessment. The Indigenous knowledge applied in the assessment is the cultural and intellectual property of those who have shared it. We employed rapid appraisal research to expeditiously develop a preliminary and qualitative understanding of Indigenous People's cultural and ecological knowledge of Alexander Archipelago wolves. We used semi-directed interviewing and inductive coding from grounded theory for text analysis. Indigenous knowledge contributed to the agency's understanding of the Alexander Archipelago wolf in Southeast Alaska and helped the agency with their classification decision. Indigenous research partners explained the rich cultural significance and position of wolves in Tlingit society and described human–wolf relationships and ecological interactions. The agency used a single-species assessment approach based in species ecology and conservation biology, whereas the Indigenous wolf experts applied a multi-species, community ecology approach based in a sociocultural context of balance and respect. The Indigenous wolf experts successfully addressed knowledge gaps identified by the agency. The partners were challenged by a short regulatory timeframe that did not allow for comprehensive study of Indigenous knowledge and constrained review and feedback by Indigenous experts. The United States Fish and Wildlife Service learned that its assessment framework was not designed to account for an Indigenous worldview. To level the playing field, the agency and Indigenous experts should discuss how to co-develop an assessment framework that equitably applies both perspectives.

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亚历山大群岛狼的本土知识和物种评估:成功、挑战和经验教训
美国阿拉斯加州的美国鱼类和野生动物管理局对亚历山大群岛狼(Canis lupus ligoni)的物种状况进行了评估,申请于 2020-2022 年将其列入《濒危物种法》。如果不将与该亚种有着深厚文化渊源的土著居民的知识纳入其中,这项联邦工作就不可能准备充分。我们的目标是通过展示原住民的知识是如何为物种状况评估做出贡献的,来传达与我们合作的原住民的权威专业知识和声音。评估中应用的土著知识是分享者的文化和知识产权。我们采用了快速评估研究的方法,以迅速对原住民关于亚历山大群岛狼的文化和生态知识形成初步的定性了解。我们采用了半定向访谈和归纳编码的基础理论进行文本分析。土著知识有助于该机构了解阿拉斯加东南部的亚历山大群岛狼,并帮助该机构做出分类决定。土著研究合作伙伴解释了狼在特林吉特社会中丰富的文化意义和地位,并描述了人狼关系和生态互动。该机构采用的是基于物种生态学和保护生物学的单一物种评估方法,而土著狼专家采用的是基于平衡和尊重的社会文化背景的多物种群落生态学方法。原住民狼专家成功地解决了该机构确定的知识差距问题。合作伙伴面临的挑战是监管时限较短,无法对土著知识进行全面研究,土著专家的审查和反馈也受到限制。美国鱼类和野生动物管理局了解到,其评估框架的设计没有考虑到土著人的世界观。为了创造公平的竞争环境,该机构和土著专家应讨论如何共同制定一个公平适用两种观点的评估框架。
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来源期刊
Journal of Wildlife Management
Journal of Wildlife Management 环境科学-动物学
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
13.00%
发文量
188
审稿时长
9-24 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Wildlife Management publishes manuscripts containing information from original research that contributes to basic wildlife science. Suitable topics include investigations into the biology and ecology of wildlife and their habitats that has direct or indirect implications for wildlife management and conservation. This includes basic information on wildlife habitat use, reproduction, genetics, demographics, viability, predator-prey relationships, space-use, movements, behavior, and physiology; but within the context of contemporary management and conservation issues such that the knowledge may ultimately be useful to wildlife practitioners. Also considered are theoretical and conceptual aspects of wildlife science, including development of new approaches to quantitative analyses, modeling of wildlife populations and habitats, and other topics that are germane to advancing wildlife science. Limited reviews or meta analyses will be considered if they provide a meaningful new synthesis or perspective on an appropriate subject. Direct evaluation of management practices or policies should be sent to the Wildlife Society Bulletin, as should papers reporting new tools or techniques. However, papers that report new tools or techniques, or effects of management practices, within the context of a broader study investigating basic wildlife biology and ecology will be considered by The Journal of Wildlife Management. Book reviews of relevant topics in basic wildlife research and biology.
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