气候变化和脉冲迁移:间歇性的Chugach因纽特人对阿拉斯加基奈海岸冰川峡湾的占领

Aron L. Crowell, M. Arimitsu
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引用次数: 0

摘要

数千年来,北极和亚北极地区的因纽特人一直受到气候变化对主要生存物种丰度影响的挑战。对气候导致的动物数量下降的应对措施包括转向其他食物来源和/或迁移到资源更丰富的地区。我们综合了来自考古遗址的大量证据,包括放射性碳测年和考古动物组合,并应用了阿拉斯加湾冰川海洋生态系统、资源丰富度空间格局和海洋-气候诱导的政权转变的当代知识,研究了阿拉斯加南部沿海的楚加奇因纽特人(Sugpiat)的这些动态。我们假设Chugach群体在低海面温度(SSTs)期间从库克湾和威廉王子湾迁移到基奈半岛,以捕获斑海豹,斑海豹在产卵季节季节性地聚集在潮汐冰川附近,以及鱼食性海鸟,太平洋鳕鱼和其他在凉爽海洋条件下茁壮成长的物种。在变暖阶段,Chugach返回库克湾和威廉王子湾,捕捞鲑鱼和其他在高海温时期大量存在的物种。这种重复(脉冲)迁移的人类-自然耦合系统的驱动因素包括太平洋年代际振荡(PDO),这是北太平洋海洋表面温度的主要模式,已被证明会在海洋食物网中产生阶梯状的政权转变;沿海冰川构成了峡湾生态系统的功能,并支持高水平的生物生产力。阿拉斯加湾冰川期海洋栖息地的Chugach生态位是建立在代际传播的生态知识基础上的,它对气候和资源变化具有弹性和流动性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Climate change and pulse migration: intermittent Chugach Inuit occupation of glacial fiords on the Kenai Coast, Alaska
For millennia, Inuit peoples of the Arctic and Subarctic have been challenged by the impacts of climate change on the abundance of key subsistence species. Responses to climate-induced declines in animal populations included switching to alternative food sources and/or migrating to regions of greater availability. We examine these dynamics for the Chugach Inuit (Sugpiat) people of southern coastal Alaska by synthesizing a large body of evidence from archeological sites, including radiocarbon dates and archaeofaunal assemblages, and by applying contemporary knowledge of glaciomarine ecosystems, spatial patterns of resource richness, and ocean-climate induced regime shifts in the Gulf of Alaska. We hypothesize that Chugach groups migrated from Cook Inlet and Prince William Sound to the Kenai Peninsula during periods of low sea surface temperatures (SSTs) to harvest harbor seals, which were seasonally aggregated near tidewater glaciers during pupping season, as well as piscivorous seabirds, Pacific cod, and other species that thrive under cool ocean conditions. During warming phases, the Chugach returned to Cook Inlet and Prince William Sound to fish for salmon and other species that abound during higher SSTs. Drivers of this coupled human-natural system of repeated (pulse) migration include the Pacific Decadal Oscillation (PDO), the dominant pattern of sea surface temperatures in the North Pacific that has been shown to generate step-like regime shifts in the marine food web; and coastal glaciers that structure the functioning of fiord ecosystems and support high levels of biological productivity. The culturally-constructed Chugach niche in the glaciomarine habitat of the Gulf of Alaska was based on intergenerationally transmitted ecological knowledge that enabled a resilient, mobile response to climate and resource variation.
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