The “Turning Point” for the Fall Goose Hunt in Eeyou Istchee: A Social-Ecological Regime Shift from an Indigenous Knowledge Perspective

We present a perspective on how the Eeyou (James Bay Cree) from Eeyou Istchee (Eastern James Bay, Québec) understand the transformation of their traditional fall goose hunt system as a consequence of social and environmental changes across marine and terrestrial ecosystems with drivers operating at...

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Veröffentlicht in:Human ecology : an interdisciplinary journal 2024-06, Vol.52 (3), p.617-636
Hauptverfasser: Idrobo, C. Julián, Leblanc, Mélanie-Louise, O’Connor, Mary I.
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container_title Human ecology : an interdisciplinary journal
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creator Idrobo, C. Julián
Leblanc, Mélanie-Louise
O’Connor, Mary I.
description We present a perspective on how the Eeyou (James Bay Cree) from Eeyou Istchee (Eastern James Bay, Québec) understand the transformation of their traditional fall goose hunt system as a consequence of social and environmental changes across marine and terrestrial ecosystems with drivers operating at the local, regional and continental scales. Eeyou land users from the Chisasibi and Wemindji First Nations report that their traditional fall goose hunt underwent a “turning point” during the early 2000s. Not only did the abundance of Canadian geese reach a historical low, but their feeding and migratory behavior became unpredictable. Eeyou land users associate such abrupt changes with the massive eelgrass die-off of the late 1990s, the onset of the effects of climate change on coastal habitats experienced since the 1970s, and agricultural development along geese flyways. This manuscript is an outcome of the Eeyou Knowledge component of the Coastal Habitat Comprehensive Research Project (2016–2022) and followed a community-based case study approach that included 28 semi-structured interviews and 14 mapping interviews with Eeyou research contributors. The findings presented here underscore the capacity of Indigenous knowledge to make sense of the multifaceted impacts of environmental change across various dimensions and layers of their social-ecological system, including management strategies and values.
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source Sociological Abstracts; Springer Nature - Complete Springer Journals
subjects Agricultural development
Anthropology
Aquatic birds
Aquatic plants
Carbohydrates
Case studies
Climate change
Climate effects
Coastal ecology
Coasts
Cree people
die-off
Environmental aspects
Environmental changes
Environmental impact
Environmental Management
Environmental stewardship
Feeding behavior
Food
Geese
Geography
Habitats
Harvest
Human ecology
Hunting
Indigenous knowledge
Knowledge
Marine ecosystems
migratory behavior
Native North Americans
Quebec
Research projects
Social interactions
Social Sciences
Social-ecological systems
Sociology
Terrestrial ecosystems
Waterfowl
Zostera marina
title The “Turning Point” for the Fall Goose Hunt in Eeyou Istchee: A Social-Ecological Regime Shift from an Indigenous Knowledge Perspective
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