Arctic Communities Turn Challenges Brought On By Climate Changes Into Advantages
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/arctic-communities-climate-change-response_us_56b8f5a2e4b01d80b2475d9a
FAIRBANKS, ALASKA When the Wellness Centre in Arviat, Nunavut took a look at what children in the town were eating, the results came as a surprise. Their diets contained almost no local foods such as caribou and berries. And they couldn't explain why.
As community members in Arviat looked more closely, they found a range of factors had contributed to the shift from a decline in traditional hunting practices to the thawing of food cellars dug deep into the permafrost that could no longer keep subsistence foods cold throughout the summer. In many northern communities, climate change threatens subsistence culture as a whole, as wildlife migration patterns change, soils warm and invasive species take hold.
The information, which was gathered in 2010, set the community into action. They began to pay more attention to local changes to the environment and to find ways to adapt.
Now, volunteers in Arviat track summer berry production and the presence of non-native species that appear on the tundra. Similar projects have been created across Nunavut. We can't tell how the climate is changing if we do not observe closely, said Shirley Tagalik, who leads the Wellness Centre.
I have a dream of moving to Iceland and starting an apple farm. Does that count?