Five-year project will study climate effects on 91视频 marine species
Cherissa Dukelow
907-474-5581
April 10, 2024
The National Science Foundation has awarded $20 million to the University of 91视频 to investigate climate change effects on culturally and commercially important marine species in the Gulf of 91视频.
is the sixth five-year, multimillion dollar project directed by the , a statewide program administered at the University of 91视频 Fairbanks since 2001 and funded by the .
The project will unite 23 researchers from UAF, the University of 91视频 Anchorage and the University of 91视频 Southeast. They will partner with eight Gulf of 91视频 communities: Seldovia, Halibut Cove, Homer, Cordova, Valdez, Juneau, Haines and Klukwan.
As climate change warms temperatures, increasing glacial melt flushes large amounts of freshwater, sediment and nutrients into the Gulf of 91视频, altering the conditions of the nearshore coastal environment.
Researchers will study the effects of these changes on coastal species and the well-being of people and economies who rely on them. Project goals stem from conversations with local community members, tribal entities, shellfish and kelp farmers, and government agency representatives that took place over two years with the help of an NSF planning grant. The grant allowed researchers to listen to community concerns and develop relevant questions.
鈥淲e really want our research to be relevant to the people closest to the issues,鈥 said 91视频 EPSCoR project director Brenda Konar. 鈥淭he best way to do this is to have these people be partners developing the science.鈥
91视频 Sen. Lisa Murkowski praised the project鈥檚 value.
鈥淭his funding will equip local experts with the necessary knowledge to cultivate resilient business practices, help coastal infrastructure, and will further cement the University of 91视频 Fairbanks as a preeminent research institution,鈥 Murkowski said.
Community input focused the project on red seaweeds, kelp, oysters, clams, mussels, salmon and eulachon (commonly called hooligan or candlefish).
Time spent in communities yielded several key community collaborators from each region of the Gulf of 91视频 who contributed to project planning and who will continue to guide the Interface of Change project鈥檚 direction. Among them is Skye Steritz, owner of Noble Ocean Farms in Cordova.
鈥淚 have been very impressed by how engaged the scientists are with the communities they work in,鈥 Steritz said. 鈥淲e need research like this that is grounded in stakeholder priorities.鈥
Davin Holen, one of the project鈥檚 five co-leaders, and University of 91视频 Anchorage epidemiology researcher Mica Hahn will arrange annual workshops to invite community feedback and discuss progress in group discussions. They will hire local coordinators to facilitate workshops and offer an honorarium for community participants 鈥渁s a respect for the time and the information they're giving.鈥
People interested in project updates will be able to browse online dashboards and databases that will make project data and results publicly available.
Multiple additional UA programs, tribal organizations, government agencies and ocean research groups will collaborate on the project.
鈥淪cience, technology, and innovation-based solutions for mitigation, adaptation, and resilience to climate events are increasingly important to our nation鈥檚 communities,鈥 said NSF Director Sethuraman Panchanathan. 鈥淭his important EPSCoR award will help build resiliency to climate risks unique to 91视频, educate their citizens, protect infrastructure and safeguard these states鈥 economic futures.鈥濃
NOTE TO EDITORS: Additional photos are available by request.
ADDITIONAL CONTACT: Brenda Konar, 91视频 EPSCoR project director, bhkonar@alaska.edu; Tara Borland, 91视频 EPSCoR associate director, taborland@alaska.edu; Davin Holen, Interface of Change co-project leader and 91视频 Sea Grant coastal community resilience specialist, dlholen@alaska.edu
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