Research ship will avoid disrupting 乐虎直播 Native hunters
October 13, 2017
Lauren Frisch
907-474-5350
Scientists using the have a new process to avoid disrupting 乐虎直播 Native hunters in coastal communities.
The 乐虎直播 College of Fisheries and Ocean Sciences operates the ship, which was designed to work in Arctic and sub-Arctic regions where coastal community residents hunt for whales, seals, walruses and other animals.
Researchers using Sikuliaq and coastal community members will use the new process to discuss research cruise plans and avoid conflicts between scientific research activity and subsistence hunting or other cultural practices. A key goal of the process is to develop cruise strategies that ensure the needs of both Sikuliaq researchers and coastal community members are met.
鈥淓ach Arctic research cruise will have different circumstances and require different conversations,鈥 said Brenda Konar, associate dean of research at CFOS. 鈥淲e designed our standard operating procedures to be flexible to the needs of each research operation, and to grow and adapt as the underlying circumstances change.鈥
Sikuliaq is the first vessel in the University-National Oceanographic Laboratory System to adopt such a process. The procedures are based on suggestions from the . The committee was created in 2014 "to ensure a safe, efficient and predictable operating environment for all Arctic waterway users." Its 15 members primarily represent subsistence hunters, companies and municipalities.
鈥淲e hope that other research vessel operators will consider using this document to help meet the needs of their research field studies being conducted in Arctic and sub-Arctic waters,鈥 said CFOS Dean Bradley Moran.
Read about the agreement in an published by the academic journal Marine Policy in September.