Re-storying Dammed Waters: Towards Kichisippi Pimisi (American Eel) Recovery in Algonquin Provincial Park

Since time immemorial, the migrations of Pimisi (American Eel, Anguilla rostrata) to the Kichisippi (Ottawa River) Watershed have woven together a vast web of interdependencies. Dam operations along these waters have driven Pimisi to endangerment, impacting ecological balances, cultural ties for the...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Yeoh, Elizabeth
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Waterloo 2024
Subjects:
dam
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10012/20509
id ftunivwaterloo:oai:uwspace.uwaterloo.ca:10012/20509
record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivwaterloo:oai:uwspace.uwaterloo.ca:10012/20509 2024-05-19T07:28:37+00:00 Re-storying Dammed Waters: Towards Kichisippi Pimisi (American Eel) Recovery in Algonquin Provincial Park Yeoh, Elizabeth 2024-04-23 http://hdl.handle.net/10012/20509 en eng University of Waterloo http://hdl.handle.net/10012/20509 american eel recovery relationality watershed connectivity dam algonquin park ottawa river design advocacy storytelling reconciliation ecological restoration Master Thesis 2024 ftunivwaterloo 2024-04-30T23:31:18Z Since time immemorial, the migrations of Pimisi (American Eel, Anguilla rostrata) to the Kichisippi (Ottawa River) Watershed have woven together a vast web of interdependencies. Dam operations along these waters have driven Pimisi to endangerment, impacting ecological balances, cultural ties for the Algonquin Anishinaabeg, and relational understandings of the watershed. Re-storying Dammed Waters considers the future of Pimisi recovery efforts by intervening in barriers to their habitat in what is now Algonquin Provincial Park in Ontario. Though celebrated for its vast offering of ‘wilderness’ experiences that foster human connection and care towards more-than-human beings, the park upholds colonial and resource-oriented legacies of land management and use. Successive and prolonged dam operations stemming from the park’s logging era to the rise of water management for recreation and hydropower development have resulted in aquatic ecosystem disruptions and biodiversity concerns that are challenging to negotiate. This thesis asks how the design of recovery interventions might reconcile human relationships with Pimisi and other more-than-human beings and systems. A research process consisting of fieldwork documenting the park and its dams, conversations with allied voices in fisheries management, and case studies of dam intervention approaches reflect upon the planning and implementation of Pimisi recovery in conjunction with its ecological and cultural narratives. The synthesis of these studies imagines an alternative story for the park’s aging Cache Lake dam in support of recovery. Restorative and interpretive interventions within a phased design scheme reinstate the rights of Pimisi to access these waters, improve habitat conditions, and usher in human awareness and care. By foregrounding more-than-human lives like Pimisi in a research process attuned to relationality, this thesis suggests that there is potential for an agential and ethical shift in how designers engage with the land. Amidst an ongoing global ... Master Thesis anishina* University of Waterloo, Canada: Institutional Repository
institution Open Polar
collection University of Waterloo, Canada: Institutional Repository
op_collection_id ftunivwaterloo
language English
topic american eel
recovery
relationality
watershed connectivity
dam
algonquin park
ottawa river
design advocacy
storytelling
reconciliation
ecological restoration
spellingShingle american eel
recovery
relationality
watershed connectivity
dam
algonquin park
ottawa river
design advocacy
storytelling
reconciliation
ecological restoration
Yeoh, Elizabeth
Re-storying Dammed Waters: Towards Kichisippi Pimisi (American Eel) Recovery in Algonquin Provincial Park
topic_facet american eel
recovery
relationality
watershed connectivity
dam
algonquin park
ottawa river
design advocacy
storytelling
reconciliation
ecological restoration
description Since time immemorial, the migrations of Pimisi (American Eel, Anguilla rostrata) to the Kichisippi (Ottawa River) Watershed have woven together a vast web of interdependencies. Dam operations along these waters have driven Pimisi to endangerment, impacting ecological balances, cultural ties for the Algonquin Anishinaabeg, and relational understandings of the watershed. Re-storying Dammed Waters considers the future of Pimisi recovery efforts by intervening in barriers to their habitat in what is now Algonquin Provincial Park in Ontario. Though celebrated for its vast offering of ‘wilderness’ experiences that foster human connection and care towards more-than-human beings, the park upholds colonial and resource-oriented legacies of land management and use. Successive and prolonged dam operations stemming from the park’s logging era to the rise of water management for recreation and hydropower development have resulted in aquatic ecosystem disruptions and biodiversity concerns that are challenging to negotiate. This thesis asks how the design of recovery interventions might reconcile human relationships with Pimisi and other more-than-human beings and systems. A research process consisting of fieldwork documenting the park and its dams, conversations with allied voices in fisheries management, and case studies of dam intervention approaches reflect upon the planning and implementation of Pimisi recovery in conjunction with its ecological and cultural narratives. The synthesis of these studies imagines an alternative story for the park’s aging Cache Lake dam in support of recovery. Restorative and interpretive interventions within a phased design scheme reinstate the rights of Pimisi to access these waters, improve habitat conditions, and usher in human awareness and care. By foregrounding more-than-human lives like Pimisi in a research process attuned to relationality, this thesis suggests that there is potential for an agential and ethical shift in how designers engage with the land. Amidst an ongoing global ...
format Master Thesis
author Yeoh, Elizabeth
author_facet Yeoh, Elizabeth
author_sort Yeoh, Elizabeth
title Re-storying Dammed Waters: Towards Kichisippi Pimisi (American Eel) Recovery in Algonquin Provincial Park
title_short Re-storying Dammed Waters: Towards Kichisippi Pimisi (American Eel) Recovery in Algonquin Provincial Park
title_full Re-storying Dammed Waters: Towards Kichisippi Pimisi (American Eel) Recovery in Algonquin Provincial Park
title_fullStr Re-storying Dammed Waters: Towards Kichisippi Pimisi (American Eel) Recovery in Algonquin Provincial Park
title_full_unstemmed Re-storying Dammed Waters: Towards Kichisippi Pimisi (American Eel) Recovery in Algonquin Provincial Park
title_sort re-storying dammed waters: towards kichisippi pimisi (american eel) recovery in algonquin provincial park
publisher University of Waterloo
publishDate 2024
url http://hdl.handle.net/10012/20509
genre anishina*
genre_facet anishina*
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10012/20509
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