Assessing and Advancing Different Ways of Knowing in Climate Adaptation in the Midwest

Black River Delta
Black river delta in Wisconsin. Public Domain.

In the Midwest, climate impacts and adaptation activities take place in various cultural and ecological settings and are conceptualized through a diverse set of knowledge systems.

Indigenous or traditional ecological knowledge (ITEK) will strengthen and expand climate adaptation work in the Midwest region.

Principal Investigator(s):

Cooperator/Partner(s):

  • Susan Galatowitsch (University of Minnesota)
  • Melissa Kenney (University of Minnesota)
  • Michael Dockry (University of Minnesota)
  • Thomas Kenote (College of Menominee Nation)
  • Robert Croll (Great Lakes Indian Fish and Wildlife Commission)
  • Kim Hall (The Nature Conservancy)
 
The Midwest region faces unique challenges from climate change that affect forests, grasslands, lakes, rivers, wetlands, and the services and cultural values these ecosystems provide. These changes also occur in a wide range of land types and cultural settings, such as on and off Tribal reservation and treaty-ceded land, within and around towns and cities, and in farms and managed forests.

The goal of adaptation science is to identify, test, and demonstrate management strategies that reduce the impacts of climate change. This project will advance the creation and distribution of adaptation science that addresses the natural resource needs of the Midwest through: 1) a synthesis project and research symposium that focuses on the role of traditional ecological knowledge in adaptation practice, 2) knowledge exchanges and a series of small research projects to conduct research and needs assessments related to Midwest CASC research priorities and 3) distributing adaptation knowledge through a virtual seminar series featuring high profile speakers and important regional topics to reach practitioners and the public beyond those involved in collaborative research and knowledge generation.
 
Leveraging the infrastructure of the Midwest CASC, launched in September 2021, and informed by regional science priorities and research needs expressed at the Midwest CASC’s Annual Gathering in August 2022, this project will advance adaptation science priorities related to heavy rainfall and drought, loss of winter, altered hydrological regimes, and novel terrestrial landscapes in the Midwest region.
 

Project Details

Principal Investigator
Jessica Hellmann
Principal Investigator Organization
University of Minnesota
Year
2023
Topic
Indigenous Peoples
Status
In Progress