4.7 Article

A Synthesis of Laaquda(x)over-cap (Northern Fur Seal) Community Surveys and Commercial Fishery Data in the Pribilof Islands Marine Ecosystem, Alaska

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/jmse10040467

Keywords

knowledge systems; Indigenous Knowledge; Local Knowledge; northern fur seals; Pribilof Islands; pollock commercial fishery

Funding

  1. The Aleut Community of St. Paul Island Tribal Council

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Indigenous communities on the Pribilof Islands have concerns about the decline in northern fur seal (NFS) abundance, with research highlighting nutritional limitation as a key factor. The study emphasizes the importance of integrating Indigenous and Local Knowledge with western science to understand ecosystem interactions, and suggests combining Indigenous and Local Knowledge-based approaches with spatiotemporal management to mitigate NFS decline.
Indigenous communities on the Pribilof Islands have longstanding cultural and economic ties to their marine ecosystem and, in particular, to laaqudan (in Unangam Tunuu) or northern fur seals (NFS; Callorhinus ursinus). Indigenous and Local Knowledge holders from the Pribilof Islands have long expressed concerns about declines in NFS abundance, and research increasingly suggests that nutritional limitation is a key factor in the decline. Using a co-production of knowledge approach, we explore perceptions of NFS ecology and commercial fishery interactions in the Pribilof Islands Marine Ecosystem (PRIME). We synthesize results from community surveys and analyses of commercial pollock (Gad us chalcogrammus) fishery catch data from 2004-2018 relative to documented NFS foraging areas. Community survey results highlighted ecosystem changes and nutritional limitation as primary drivers of recent declines in Pribilof Islands NFS. Consistent with these results, pollock catch data indicate there are concentrated areas of pollock harvest over time near the Pribilof Islands where female NFS forage. These results reinforce the value of considering Indigenous and Local Knowledge and western science together to better understand ecosystem interactions. Our findings also support the consideration of Indigenous and Local Knowledge-based approaches in combination with spatiotemporal management to mitigate NFS nutritional limitation and Pribilof Islands NFS declines.

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