Logo image
Vulnerability and adaptation to climate change in the Canadian Arctic
Book chapter   Peer reviewed

Vulnerability and adaptation to climate change in the Canadian Arctic

Tristan Pearce and B Smit
Climate Vulnerability: Understanding and Addressing Threats to Essential Resources, Volume 4, pp.293-303
Academic Press
2013
url
https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-384703-4.00439-1View
Published Version

Abstract

Physical Geography and Environmental Geoscience adaptation Canadian Arctic climate change food security Inuit livelihoods permafrost subsistence traditional knowledge vulnerability
Arctic ecosystems are already experiencing and responding to climate change. Inuit communities are highly dependent on the natural environment for their livelihoods, and hence are particularly sensitive to the effects of climate change. Community-based studies across the Canadian Arctic have identified several widespread vulnerabilities. Subsistence hunting is susceptible to changes in wildlife populations and access to hunting areas; permafrost degradation has implications for community infrastructure and for coastal erosion; changes in the availability of harvested food contribute an additional risk to people s health; the erosion of environmental knowledge and land skills enhances the vulnerability of Inuit hunters to climate risks; and economic opportunities may come with more shipping, but may be constrained by closed ice roads and limits on the sport hunting industry.

Details

Metrics

9 File views/ downloads
790 Record Views
Logo image