Feathered Roots and Migratory Routes: Immigrants and Birds in the Anthropocene

Author:

Pizarro J. Cristobal1,Larson Brendon M. H.2

Affiliation:

1. Universidad de Concepcion jpizarrop@udec.cl

2. University of Waterloo blarson@uwaterloo.ca

Abstract

Human mobility necessitates that people adapt not only to a new society but also to a new natural environment and biodiversity. We use birds as biodiversity proxies to explore the place experiences of 26 Latin Americans adapting to Canada and the United States. Using interviews with open-ended questions, we prompted participants to identify birds that were linked to remarkable experiences in both places of origin and immigration, which we coded respectively as “roots” and “routes.” Participants reported foundational keystone species linked to their cultural heritage and conspicuous key species they associated with self-realization in the new place. Linking species, involving connections between roots and routes, triggered a process of place recalibration in association with key and keystone birds that worked as points of reference. We suggest that biodiversity offers critical social functions that need to be addressed by social integration programs promoting conviviality between humans and nature in the Anthropocene.

Publisher

Berghahn Books

Subject

General Social Sciences

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