Research will address climate change and rise of land masses after last glacial period.
University of Waterloo researcher Heidi Swanson is set to receive $1.2 million, over five years, from the Federal government’s $75 million Coastal Restoration Fund to perform community-partnered research. The aim of the project is to restore fish in the Coppermine River and other river systems near Kugluktuk, Nunavut. The funding is part of the $1.5 billion Ocean Protections Plan — the largest investment ever made to protect Canada's coasts and waterways.
Swanson, an assistant professor from the Department of Biology, has been building relationships with subsistence fishers in Kugluktuk for over a decade. In a model example of community-driven scientific research, Swanson’s team has responded to concerns initially posed by the Kugluktuk Hunter and Trapper Association about their fishery — specifically, why numbers of Arctic char in the Coppermine River are in decline, and if there are streams used by migrating fish that can be restored to increase fish passage.
“The way the project started is that colleagues from Fisheries and Oceans Canada and I met with the Hunter and Trapper Association in Kugluktuk to hear about their fishery concerns,” said Swanson. “We developed this project based on those concerns.”
A significant portion of the funding will go to the association for traditional knowledge research and to hire local field and restoration workers.
“This partnership between professor Swanson, her students, and the Kugluktuk Hunter and Trapper Association, is truly exemplary community-driven scientific research,” said Roy Brouwer, Executive Director of the Water Institute, of which Swanson is a member. “Such partnerships, that address local concerns, offer an important pathway to sustainable solutions to Canada’s Northern water challenges.”
The Coastal Restoration Fund supports projects aimed at restoring some of our most vulnerable coastal aquatic habitats. Preference is given to projects that are multiyear and involve a broad number of partners that include Indigenous groups.
Story originally published on Waterloo Stories.
In the media
Listen to Swanson's interview with Radio Canada International (RCI).