Freshwater fisheries monitoring in northern ecosystems using Indigenous ecological knowledge, genomics, and life history: Insights for community decision-making

Author:

Bowles Ella12,Jeon Hyung-Bae1,Marin Kia1,MacLeod Pamela3,Fraser Dylan J.1

Affiliation:

1. Concordia University, 7141 Sherbrooke St. West, Montreal, QC H4B 1R6, Canada

2. Current affiliation: Canadian Wildlife Service, 351 Boulevard St. Joseph, Gatineau, QC J8Y 3Z5, Canada

3. Cree Nation of Mistissini, 187 Main Street, Mistissini, QC G0W 1C0, Canada

Abstract

Natural resources in northern regions are often data-limited because they are difficult and expensive to access. Indigenous ecological knowledge (IEK) can provide information similar to, different from, or complementary to Western scientific data (WSD). We evaluated the general hypothesis that congruence in outcomes of IEK and WSD for population monitoring parameters is determined by temporal and spatial scale of the knowledge type. Parameters included population structure, degree of philopatry, morphological variation (and conservation status for one species), and genomics was a key Western scientific method. We evaluated this hypothesis in three subsistence and recreational fisheries (walleye, lake trout, and northern pike) in Mistassini Lake, Quebec, Canada. Concordance of outcomes was varied. IEK provided richer information on the biology, distribution, and morphological variation observable with the eyes. However, IEK cannot “see” into the genome, and WSD identified population structure and history more precisely than IEK. Both knowledge types could “see” change in populations, and the nature of what was seen both converged and was complementary. Determining when IEK and WSD are complementary or reach common conclusions may allow Indigenous communities to use both together, or one knowledge type over another when either is more desired, appropriate, or time- or cost-efficient to adopt.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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