Background
The Native Village of Kotzebue is located on the Baldwin Peninsula, 30 miles above the Arctic Circle in northwest Alaska. It has a population of roughly 3,000 people known as the indigenous Qikiktagrugmiut. The Qikiktagrugmiut people rely upon the environment to provide food, shelter, and a cultural connection to their surroundings. Recent climatic change is of deep concern to community members as they witness their environment changing around them.
Implementation
The tribal government of the Qikiktagrugmiut community, with National Park Service funding, conducted a study to document the traditional knowledge of environmental change, focusing on observations from the 1950s to 2002. The entire study was conceived, developed, and conducted by tribal members and tribal employees. Interviewers asked semi-directive questions to engage elders in conversations about environmental change.
Hunters commented on changes in their ability to travel across the land. In the past, summers were typified by high winds and fog along with the break-up of sea ice; winters were typified by extremely low temperatures and high winds. During winter, hunters’ mobility is further defined by the timing of freeze-up, the thickness of newly formed ice, and the timing and magnitude of snow. Recent changes witnessed by the hunters starting in the 1970s include warmer temperatures, less consistency in seasons, extreme temperature swings, and altered precipitation patterns. Also, the game composition has shifted, with more Western Arctic Caribou traveling through the area and the appearance of moose.
Citation
Feifel, K. and Braddock, K.N. (2021). Documenting Traditional Ecological Knowledge in Northwest Alaska [Case study on a project of Kotzebue IRA]. Version 2.0. Product of EcoAdapt's State of Adaptation Program. (Last updated May 2021)
This case study was originally published on the EcoAdapt Climate Adaptation Knowledge Exchange.