Traditional ecological knowledge reveals the extent of sympatric lake trout diversity and habitat preferences

Multidisciplinary approaches to conservation have become increasingly important in northern regions. Because many First Nations communities have relied on freshwater fish populations for essential food over millennia, community members often possess traditional ecological knowledge (TEK). We consult...

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Main Authors: Marin, Kia, Coon, Andrew, Fraser, Dylan J
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Resilience Alliance 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol22/iss2/art20/
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spelling ftjecolog:oai:.www.ecologyandsociety.org:article/9345 2023-05-15T16:15:21+02:00 Traditional ecological knowledge reveals the extent of sympatric lake trout diversity and habitat preferences Marin, Kia Coon, Andrew Fraser, Dylan J 2017-05-15 text/html application/pdf http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol22/iss2/art20/ en eng Resilience Alliance Ecology and Society; Vol. 22, No. 2 (2017) Cree; First Nations; lake trout; Mistassini Lake; population differentiation; Salvelinus namaycush; TEK; traditional ecological knowledge Peer-Reviewed Reports 2017 ftjecolog 2019-04-09T11:23:15Z Multidisciplinary approaches to conservation have become increasingly important in northern regions. Because many First Nations communities have relied on freshwater fish populations for essential food over millennia, community members often possess traditional ecological knowledge (TEK). We consulted Cree First Nation fishers to collate TEK for one of Canada's most important subsistence fishes (lake trout) in Québec’s largest lake (Mistassini, 2335 km2). We further integrated TEK with what was regionally known scientifically about the species, toward effective fisheries conservation. Cree fishers described a richer diversity of sympatric lake trout forms than did scientific research that was conducted simultaneously, based on color, size, fin accent patterns, scale texture and depth, and spatial preferences. Traditional ecological knowledge also provided descriptions of lake trout seasonal movements, spawning locations, and reproductive timing that were not captured by scientific research, and highlighted several concerns or temporal changes of import to future management initiatives. Our study highlights the wealth of TEK on harvested species in First Nations communities. It further illustrates how TEK can reveal not only distinctions within species of relevance to natural resource management and taxonomy, but also informs upon the extent of such population differentiation, thereby providing important conservation benefits for remote and northern regions. Other/Unknown Material First Nations Unknown
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id ftjecolog
language English
topic Cree; First Nations; lake trout; Mistassini Lake; population differentiation; Salvelinus namaycush; TEK; traditional ecological knowledge
spellingShingle Cree; First Nations; lake trout; Mistassini Lake; population differentiation; Salvelinus namaycush; TEK; traditional ecological knowledge
Marin, Kia
Coon, Andrew
Fraser, Dylan J
Traditional ecological knowledge reveals the extent of sympatric lake trout diversity and habitat preferences
topic_facet Cree; First Nations; lake trout; Mistassini Lake; population differentiation; Salvelinus namaycush; TEK; traditional ecological knowledge
description Multidisciplinary approaches to conservation have become increasingly important in northern regions. Because many First Nations communities have relied on freshwater fish populations for essential food over millennia, community members often possess traditional ecological knowledge (TEK). We consulted Cree First Nation fishers to collate TEK for one of Canada's most important subsistence fishes (lake trout) in Québec’s largest lake (Mistassini, 2335 km2). We further integrated TEK with what was regionally known scientifically about the species, toward effective fisheries conservation. Cree fishers described a richer diversity of sympatric lake trout forms than did scientific research that was conducted simultaneously, based on color, size, fin accent patterns, scale texture and depth, and spatial preferences. Traditional ecological knowledge also provided descriptions of lake trout seasonal movements, spawning locations, and reproductive timing that were not captured by scientific research, and highlighted several concerns or temporal changes of import to future management initiatives. Our study highlights the wealth of TEK on harvested species in First Nations communities. It further illustrates how TEK can reveal not only distinctions within species of relevance to natural resource management and taxonomy, but also informs upon the extent of such population differentiation, thereby providing important conservation benefits for remote and northern regions.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Marin, Kia
Coon, Andrew
Fraser, Dylan J
author_facet Marin, Kia
Coon, Andrew
Fraser, Dylan J
author_sort Marin, Kia
title Traditional ecological knowledge reveals the extent of sympatric lake trout diversity and habitat preferences
title_short Traditional ecological knowledge reveals the extent of sympatric lake trout diversity and habitat preferences
title_full Traditional ecological knowledge reveals the extent of sympatric lake trout diversity and habitat preferences
title_fullStr Traditional ecological knowledge reveals the extent of sympatric lake trout diversity and habitat preferences
title_full_unstemmed Traditional ecological knowledge reveals the extent of sympatric lake trout diversity and habitat preferences
title_sort traditional ecological knowledge reveals the extent of sympatric lake trout diversity and habitat preferences
publisher Resilience Alliance
publishDate 2017
url http://www.ecologyandsociety.org/vol22/iss2/art20/
genre First Nations
genre_facet First Nations
op_source Ecology and Society; Vol. 22, No. 2 (2017)
_version_ 1766001082848247808