Climate change, nutrient pollution, land conversion, overexploitation, and invasive species and diseases – the ‘big five’ global drivers of ecosystem change – are altering biodiversity in the Arctic. Changes in biodiversity have implications for local people since they depend on biodiversity for their traditional activities. Remote Arctic areas lack scientific records of biodiversity status and trends. Indigenous knowledge (IK) can help fill in these information gaps. More importantly, IK is essential to establish policies and practices for biodiversity conservation and sustainable use of biological diversity. This study presents indigenous people’s perceptions of changes and trends in biodiversity in Arctic Yakutia in Northeastern Siberia,...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2021A significant percentage of the earth’s surface is own...
This review provides a synopsis of the main findings of individual papers in the special issue Terre...
Global air temperature is unequivocally increasing and will keep rising, more rapidly in the Arctic ...
Climate change, nutrient pollution, land conversion, overexploitation, and invasive species and dise...
In this publication, we show the link between environmental change, based on Inuit perspectives and ...
Biological diversity is the basis for, and an indicator of biosphere integrity. Together with climat...
The individual of a species is the basic unit which responds to climate and UV-B changes, and it res...
We investigate the perceptions and impacts of climate change on 11 Indigenous communities in Norther...
At the dawn of the third millennium, dramatic challenges face human civilization everywhere. Relatio...
As ancestral biodiversity responded dynamically to late-Quaternary climate changes, so are extant or...
International audienceAs with many Indigenous Peoples, the Siberian Evenki nomadic reindeer herders ...
Biodiversity is a complex concept that presents three primary facets: genetic, species and ecologica...
Arctic terrestrial ecosystems are particularly vulnerable to the effects of ongoing and predicted cl...
Climate change is affecting the biodiversity, ecosystem services and the well-being of people that l...
The Arctic is undergoing rapid transformations as a result of global change. Global change drivers s...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2021A significant percentage of the earth’s surface is own...
This review provides a synopsis of the main findings of individual papers in the special issue Terre...
Global air temperature is unequivocally increasing and will keep rising, more rapidly in the Arctic ...
Climate change, nutrient pollution, land conversion, overexploitation, and invasive species and dise...
In this publication, we show the link between environmental change, based on Inuit perspectives and ...
Biological diversity is the basis for, and an indicator of biosphere integrity. Together with climat...
The individual of a species is the basic unit which responds to climate and UV-B changes, and it res...
We investigate the perceptions and impacts of climate change on 11 Indigenous communities in Norther...
At the dawn of the third millennium, dramatic challenges face human civilization everywhere. Relatio...
As ancestral biodiversity responded dynamically to late-Quaternary climate changes, so are extant or...
International audienceAs with many Indigenous Peoples, the Siberian Evenki nomadic reindeer herders ...
Biodiversity is a complex concept that presents three primary facets: genetic, species and ecologica...
Arctic terrestrial ecosystems are particularly vulnerable to the effects of ongoing and predicted cl...
Climate change is affecting the biodiversity, ecosystem services and the well-being of people that l...
The Arctic is undergoing rapid transformations as a result of global change. Global change drivers s...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2021A significant percentage of the earth’s surface is own...
This review provides a synopsis of the main findings of individual papers in the special issue Terre...
Global air temperature is unequivocally increasing and will keep rising, more rapidly in the Arctic ...