Local knowledge, subsistence harvests, and social-ecological complexity in James Bay

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Abstract

Ecosystems are complex and difficult to predict and control. Western science-based societies have tended to simplify ecosystems to manage them. Some indigenous and other rural groups who interact closely with a given resource system seem to have developed practices that are adapted to live with complexity. This paper examines how indigenous Cree hunters in James Bay, subarctic Canada, understand and deal with ecological complexity and dynamics, and how their understanding of uncertainty and variability shape subsistence activities. The focus is the Canada goose (Branta canadensis) hunt which is adaptive to shifts and changes in local and regional conditions. Ecological understandings of Cree hunters allow them to account for and deal with a very large number of variables at multiples scales. The Cree deal with these variables qualitatively, an approach consistent with some scientific ways of dealing with complexity, such as adaptive management and fuzzy logic. © Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2009.

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Peloquin, C., & Berkes, F. (2009). Local knowledge, subsistence harvests, and social-ecological complexity in James Bay. Human Ecology, 37(5), 533–545. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10745-009-9255-0

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