id ftdatacite:10.5443/11407
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language English
topic Arctic
Caribou
Circumpolar region
Climate change
Disease
Habitat vulnerability
Parasites
Population dynamics
Reindeer
Circumpolar Biodiversity Monitoring Program, Conservation of Arctic Flora and Fauna - Terrestrial
International Polar Year-Starting the clock for the CARMA network Global change, resilience and human-rangifer systems of the CircumArctic
spellingShingle Arctic
Caribou
Circumpolar region
Climate change
Disease
Habitat vulnerability
Parasites
Population dynamics
Reindeer
Circumpolar Biodiversity Monitoring Program, Conservation of Arctic Flora and Fauna - Terrestrial
International Polar Year-Starting the clock for the CARMA network Global change, resilience and human-rangifer systems of the CircumArctic
Russell, Don
Adamczewski, Jan
Branigan, Marsha
Griffith, Brad
Gunn, Anne
Kofinas, Gary
Kutz, Susan
Nixon, Wendy
White, Robert
Starting the clock on the CARMA Network: Global change impacts on human/Rangifer systems in the CircumArctic
topic_facet Arctic
Caribou
Circumpolar region
Climate change
Disease
Habitat vulnerability
Parasites
Population dynamics
Reindeer
Circumpolar Biodiversity Monitoring Program, Conservation of Arctic Flora and Fauna - Terrestrial
International Polar Year-Starting the clock for the CARMA network Global change, resilience and human-rangifer systems of the CircumArctic
description CARMA is an international network of researchers, habitat specialists, climate specialists, veterinarians and disease ecologists, community representatives and management agencies who are concerned about the impacts of global change on the world's wild reindeer and caribou herds. Through the support of the International Polar Year (IPY), much of the CARMA Network monitoring activity has been focussed on health and body condition, population trends, and habitat changes of caribou in selected herds across the Arctic. An assessment of body condition provides measurable indicators for ecological monitoring, especially when monitored concurrently with assessments of parasites, disease, habitat quality, distribution, and demographic parameters. Fat and protein levels of cow caribou are considered a good integrator of seasonal environmental conditions (including infectious and parasitic disease) that relate closely to pregnancy success and calf survival. The CARMA Network has developed monitoring protocol manuals to ensure consistency in methods used to measure health and body condition and in data management. CARMA developed an extensive climate database that covers all calving (summer, fall, winter and spring) ranges for CARMA's herds in: Ahiak, Akia-Maniitsoq, Baffin Island, Bathurst, Beverly, Bluenose East, Bluenose West, Cape Bathurst, Central Arctic, Chokotka (Chukotka), George River, Hardangervidda, Iceland, Kangerlussuaq-Sisimiut, Leaf River, Lena, Porcupine, Qamanirjuaq, Southampton Island, Sundrun, Taimyr, Teshekpuk Lake, Western Arctic, and Yana Indigirka (Indigurka). As part of synthesis efforts, we are summarizing trends in caribou-relevant climate variables. Climate trends will be identified and related to global climate oscillations, and relevance to caribou ecology will be highlighted. : Purpose: Although aboriginal communities have been experiencing and coping with caribou abundance and scarcity for millennium, western science has only been accumulating systematic data for approximately forty years, a period that started with caribou lows, continued with almost universal increases, and, since the 1990s, has seen dramatic widespread population declines. Also during this forty-year period, the management of the herds in North America has shifted from central regulation to local control sparked by aboriginal land claims settlements. As herds decline, the groups responsible have been asking questions about causes of declines and whether with increased development, human activity, climate change and more efficient hunting methods, the herds will recover. Moreover, they seek assistance in knowing what can be done to halt the declines and facilitate recovery. For the few herds that have not declined or only begun to decline, experiences gained will be an invaluable tool for managers. That collective experience needed to be formally coordinated, a task that has been the primary objective of the CARMA (CircumArctic Rangifer Monitoring and Assessment) Network. CARMA is an international network which focuses on the impacts of global change on the world's wild Rangifer (reindeer and caribou) herds. It is part of a system of networks under the Circumpolar Biodiversity Monitoring Program. CARMA's priorities revolve around six "synthesis" questions: (1) How important are seasonal ranges to Rangifer? What are the relative contributions of different seasonal ranges to fecundity, pathogens (parasites and diseases), body condition and survival? (2) What is different about the herds? How consistent, or variable, are the relationships among herds? (3) What causes herds to grow or decline? Is there any common suite of input (habitat) or output (demography) variables that indicate direction of herd growth? (4) How important are pathogens and predators? In what ways do pathogens and predators affect productivity, habitat use and distribution? (5) How important is human harvest to caribou and reindeer herd growth or decline? Are human effects on population abundance additive or compensatory? (6) How are people responding to change now and how might they respond in the future? What are the patterns of human community response (mitigation, adaptation, transformation) to change in caribou abundance, distribution, fecundity, health, and body condition? : Summary: Wild reindeer and caribou herds in the Arctic depend on many factors in their physical environment for survival. How they adapt to changes in these factors determines a herd's resiliency. This project is assessing the well-being of specific herds in the Canadian North in relation to climate change. By looking retrospectively and establishing new intensive monitoring protocols, the general health, body condition, population trends and shifts in habitat of these herds are being assessed. To get a global picture, these data are being compared to other herds across the circumpolar North. Furthermore, many northern communities rely on reindeer and caribou economically, socially and culturally. This project is also investigating these communities' abilities to sustain traditional caribou harvesting under conditions of change.
format Dataset
author Russell, Don
Adamczewski, Jan
Branigan, Marsha
Griffith, Brad
Gunn, Anne
Kofinas, Gary
Kutz, Susan
Nixon, Wendy
White, Robert
author_facet Russell, Don
Adamczewski, Jan
Branigan, Marsha
Griffith, Brad
Gunn, Anne
Kofinas, Gary
Kutz, Susan
Nixon, Wendy
White, Robert
author_sort Russell, Don
title Starting the clock on the CARMA Network: Global change impacts on human/Rangifer systems in the CircumArctic
title_short Starting the clock on the CARMA Network: Global change impacts on human/Rangifer systems in the CircumArctic
title_full Starting the clock on the CARMA Network: Global change impacts on human/Rangifer systems in the CircumArctic
title_fullStr Starting the clock on the CARMA Network: Global change impacts on human/Rangifer systems in the CircumArctic
title_full_unstemmed Starting the clock on the CARMA Network: Global change impacts on human/Rangifer systems in the CircumArctic
title_sort starting the clock on the carma network: global change impacts on human/rangifer systems in the circumarctic
publisher Canadian Cryospheric Information Network
publishDate 2012
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5443/11407
https://www.polardata.ca/pdcsearch/?doi_id=11407
long_lat ENVELOPE(-55.633,-55.633,72.633,72.633)
ENVELOPE(-53.674,-53.674,66.939,66.939)
ENVELOPE(-128.068,-128.068,70.579,70.579)
ENVELOPE(149.609,149.609,70.929,70.929)
ENVELOPE(-84.501,-84.501,64.463,64.463)
ENVELOPE(-55.217,-55.217,72.967,72.967)
ENVELOPE(73.283,73.283,-53.033,-53.033)
ENVELOPE(152.546,152.546,70.773,70.773)
geographic Arctic
Baffin Island
Kangerlussuaq
Sisimiut
Cape Bathurst
Indigirka
Southampton Island
Maniitsoq
West Cape
Sundrun
geographic_facet Arctic
Baffin Island
Kangerlussuaq
Sisimiut
Cape Bathurst
Indigirka
Southampton Island
Maniitsoq
West Cape
Sundrun
genre Arctic
Baffin Island
Baffin
Chukotka
Circumpolar biodiversity monitoring program
Climate change
Conservation of Arctic Flora and Fauna
Iceland
International Polar Year
IPY
Kangerlussuaq
Maniitsoq
Sisimiut
Southampton Island
Taimyr
genre_facet Arctic
Baffin Island
Baffin
Chukotka
Circumpolar biodiversity monitoring program
Climate change
Conservation of Arctic Flora and Fauna
Iceland
International Polar Year
IPY
Kangerlussuaq
Maniitsoq
Sisimiut
Southampton Island
Taimyr
op_rights Public
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5443/11407
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5443/11407 2023-05-15T14:59:10+02:00 Starting the clock on the CARMA Network: Global change impacts on human/Rangifer systems in the CircumArctic Russell, Don Adamczewski, Jan Branigan, Marsha Griffith, Brad Gunn, Anne Kofinas, Gary Kutz, Susan Nixon, Wendy White, Robert 2012 https://dx.doi.org/10.5443/11407 https://www.polardata.ca/pdcsearch/?doi_id=11407 en eng Canadian Cryospheric Information Network Public Arctic Caribou Circumpolar region Climate change Disease Habitat vulnerability Parasites Population dynamics Reindeer Circumpolar Biodiversity Monitoring Program, Conservation of Arctic Flora and Fauna - Terrestrial International Polar Year-Starting the clock for the CARMA network Global change, resilience and human-rangifer systems of the CircumArctic dataset Dataset 2012 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5443/11407 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z CARMA is an international network of researchers, habitat specialists, climate specialists, veterinarians and disease ecologists, community representatives and management agencies who are concerned about the impacts of global change on the world's wild reindeer and caribou herds. Through the support of the International Polar Year (IPY), much of the CARMA Network monitoring activity has been focussed on health and body condition, population trends, and habitat changes of caribou in selected herds across the Arctic. An assessment of body condition provides measurable indicators for ecological monitoring, especially when monitored concurrently with assessments of parasites, disease, habitat quality, distribution, and demographic parameters. Fat and protein levels of cow caribou are considered a good integrator of seasonal environmental conditions (including infectious and parasitic disease) that relate closely to pregnancy success and calf survival. The CARMA Network has developed monitoring protocol manuals to ensure consistency in methods used to measure health and body condition and in data management. CARMA developed an extensive climate database that covers all calving (summer, fall, winter and spring) ranges for CARMA's herds in: Ahiak, Akia-Maniitsoq, Baffin Island, Bathurst, Beverly, Bluenose East, Bluenose West, Cape Bathurst, Central Arctic, Chokotka (Chukotka), George River, Hardangervidda, Iceland, Kangerlussuaq-Sisimiut, Leaf River, Lena, Porcupine, Qamanirjuaq, Southampton Island, Sundrun, Taimyr, Teshekpuk Lake, Western Arctic, and Yana Indigirka (Indigurka). As part of synthesis efforts, we are summarizing trends in caribou-relevant climate variables. Climate trends will be identified and related to global climate oscillations, and relevance to caribou ecology will be highlighted. : Purpose: Although aboriginal communities have been experiencing and coping with caribou abundance and scarcity for millennium, western science has only been accumulating systematic data for approximately forty years, a period that started with caribou lows, continued with almost universal increases, and, since the 1990s, has seen dramatic widespread population declines. Also during this forty-year period, the management of the herds in North America has shifted from central regulation to local control sparked by aboriginal land claims settlements. As herds decline, the groups responsible have been asking questions about causes of declines and whether with increased development, human activity, climate change and more efficient hunting methods, the herds will recover. Moreover, they seek assistance in knowing what can be done to halt the declines and facilitate recovery. For the few herds that have not declined or only begun to decline, experiences gained will be an invaluable tool for managers. That collective experience needed to be formally coordinated, a task that has been the primary objective of the CARMA (CircumArctic Rangifer Monitoring and Assessment) Network. CARMA is an international network which focuses on the impacts of global change on the world's wild Rangifer (reindeer and caribou) herds. It is part of a system of networks under the Circumpolar Biodiversity Monitoring Program. CARMA's priorities revolve around six "synthesis" questions: (1) How important are seasonal ranges to Rangifer? What are the relative contributions of different seasonal ranges to fecundity, pathogens (parasites and diseases), body condition and survival? (2) What is different about the herds? How consistent, or variable, are the relationships among herds? (3) What causes herds to grow or decline? Is there any common suite of input (habitat) or output (demography) variables that indicate direction of herd growth? (4) How important are pathogens and predators? In what ways do pathogens and predators affect productivity, habitat use and distribution? (5) How important is human harvest to caribou and reindeer herd growth or decline? Are human effects on population abundance additive or compensatory? (6) How are people responding to change now and how might they respond in the future? What are the patterns of human community response (mitigation, adaptation, transformation) to change in caribou abundance, distribution, fecundity, health, and body condition? : Summary: Wild reindeer and caribou herds in the Arctic depend on many factors in their physical environment for survival. How they adapt to changes in these factors determines a herd's resiliency. This project is assessing the well-being of specific herds in the Canadian North in relation to climate change. By looking retrospectively and establishing new intensive monitoring protocols, the general health, body condition, population trends and shifts in habitat of these herds are being assessed. To get a global picture, these data are being compared to other herds across the circumpolar North. Furthermore, many northern communities rely on reindeer and caribou economically, socially and culturally. This project is also investigating these communities' abilities to sustain traditional caribou harvesting under conditions of change. Dataset Arctic Baffin Island Baffin Chukotka Circumpolar biodiversity monitoring program Climate change Conservation of Arctic Flora and Fauna Iceland International Polar Year IPY Kangerlussuaq Maniitsoq Sisimiut Southampton Island Taimyr DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic Baffin Island Kangerlussuaq ENVELOPE(-55.633,-55.633,72.633,72.633) Sisimiut ENVELOPE(-53.674,-53.674,66.939,66.939) Cape Bathurst ENVELOPE(-128.068,-128.068,70.579,70.579) Indigirka ENVELOPE(149.609,149.609,70.929,70.929) Southampton Island ENVELOPE(-84.501,-84.501,64.463,64.463) Maniitsoq ENVELOPE(-55.217,-55.217,72.967,72.967) West Cape ENVELOPE(73.283,73.283,-53.033,-53.033) Sundrun ENVELOPE(152.546,152.546,70.773,70.773)