Ecological Calendars and Climate Adaptation Project (ECCAP)
What are Ecological Calendars?
Calendars enable us to anticipate future conditions and plan activities. Ecological calendars keep track of time by observing seasonal changes in our habitat. The nascence of a flower, emergence of an insect, arrival of a migratory bird, breakup of ice, or last day of snow cover – each is a useful cue for livelihood activities, such as sowing crops, gathering plants, herding animals, hunting, fishing, or observing cultural festivals.
Many human communities have developed unique and reliable systems to recognize and respond to climatic variability. Multiple generations living in particular landscapes accumulate knowledge of the relational timing of celestial and ecological phenomena. Historically, these diverse ecological calendars enabled communities to coordinate livelihood activities with seasonal processes. However, due to colonization and industrialization, these calendars fell into disuse. Now these calendars are pregnant with promise and require recalibration to new conditions and increasing variability due to anthropogenic climate change. |
Why are Ecological Calendars Relevant?
The greatest challenge of anthropogenic climate change is lack of predictability due to unprecedented weather patterns. Developing anticipatory capacity – the ability to envision possible futures and develop a dynamic plan to deal with uncertainties – is urgent. Ecological calendars contribute to food and livelihood security. An estimated 70-80% of the world’s population continues to rely on food produced by small-holder farmers and herders. Food systems require the ability to anticipate patterns of temperature and precipitation. Communities and researchers must innovate to adapt to a greater range of possible scenarios.
The Kassam Research Group is leading two participatory action research projects focused on ecological calendars in North America and the Pamir Mountains of Central Asia. The overarching aim of these projects are to revitalize, recalibrate, and develop new ecological calendars by integrating place-based and indigenous knowledge with science. These projects aim to establish a proof-of-concept for ecological calendars in collaboration with diverse indigenous and rural communities across the globe. |
Ecological Calendars for Climate Change Adaptation (North America)
With support from the Atkinson Center for a Sustainable Future, we are partnering with Dakota and Lakota First Nations in Standing Rock and rural communities in the Oneida Lake Watershed of upstate New York.
In December 2015, the research group collaborated with the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe to host a 3-day workshop for Elders, youth, and tribal government agencies focused on ecological calendars. Based on the recommendations of workshop participants, we continued to organize focus groups and individual interviews to document phenological knowledge and seasonal activities in eight reservation communities.
In June 2016, the research group hosted two workshops at the Cornell Biological Field Station on Oneida Lake to plan the research process and identify sources of community knowledge. Following the workshop, we conducted interviews with farmers, fishers, beekeepers, orchardists, maple syrup producers, birders, and others to engage with their rich knowledge of seasonal processes in the Oneida Lake Watershed. |
Significant results in 2018 at Lake Oneida, New York, USA:
Significant results in 2018 at Standing Rock, North and South Dakota, USA
|
Project team includes:
|
Ecological Calendars and Climate Adaptation in the Pamirs (Central Asia)
With support from the Belmont Forum, the National Science Foundation (USA), the National Science Foundation (China), Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (Italy), and Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (Germany), the Kassam Research Group will be partnering with communities in the Shugnan Valley of Badakhshan, Afghanistan; Alai Valley of Osh Province, Kyrgyztan; Tashkurgan Valley of Xinjiang, China; and Bartang Valley of Gorno-Badakhshan, Tajikistan.
In July 2016, Professor Kassam, along with the International team of scholars and students, hosted workshops in Alai Valley in Osh Province, Kyrgyzstan and Tashkurgan Valley in Xinjiang, China to conceptualize ecological calendars research in the Pamirs. In addition to preliminary research, climate stations were established in the high altitude mountain communities. |
In 2017, the Kassam Research Group returned to these communities to continue participatory human ecological mapping. In addition, we established the project in the villages of Savnob and Roshorv in the Bartang Valley of Gorno-Badakhshan, Tajikistan and began ethnographic research. Furthermore, similar ethnographic research began in Sary Mogul in the Alai Valley, Kyrgyzstan. Research in Shugnan, Afghanistan was postponed due to security threats. After a two year delay due to security concerns, in 2018 in Badakhshan, Afghanistan, a preliminary workshop in the regions of Bahrak and Jurum took place. |
Significant results in 2018, undertaken by the Lead PI with the assistance of German and US graduate students and community researchers: At the Villages of Roshorv and Savnob in the Bartang Valley of Tajikistan and the Village of Sary Mogul in the Alai Valley of Kyrgyzstan:
Additional Significant Results in 2018:
|
Project team includes:
|
Summary 2019:
Having validated our ethnographic research and ground-truthed our climate data in each of the respective research sites in North American and the Pamir Mountains of Central Asia, in 2019 we integrated the transdisciplinary humanities’, social and biophysical science data in collaboration with our diverse and respective teams in Germany, Italy and the USA. |
Furthermore, the combined indigenous ecological knowledge with the biophysical and social sciences has produced context-specific draft ecological calendars for our sites in Central Asia and North America. Specifically, we have draft ecological calendars for the communities of Savnob and Roshorv (Tajikistan), Sary Mogul (Kyrgyzstan), Standing Rock Sioux Nation (USA), and Oneida Lake, New York (USA). In addition, key biophysical indicators that inform food security and livelihood activities for each of these communities have been identified. This is key for further transdisciplinary research of climate change impacts on these indicator species. |
Summary 2020:
Fieldwork in 2020 required validating the draft ecological calendars to anticipate climate change with each of the specific communities in Central Asia and North America. We have been unable to achieve this due to the global pandemic. Nonetheless, we are finding creative ways to continue our research remotely in all these regions by using other data sources and technologies that facilitate communication. |
Planning for the International Conference in 2021 to conclude the project continued. Rhythms of the Land: Indigenous Knowledge, Science, and Thriving Together in a Changing Climate” is scheduled to take place the week of September 27th, 2021 at the Cornell Botanic Gardens and the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art. This conference will bring indigenous community members, scientists, high-ranking policy makers, artists, and our students from around the World to discuss applied transdisciplinary research to anticipate climate change at the level of communities. |
Civil Society PartnersAgWeatherNet (Washington State University) American Geophysical Union CAMP Tabiat (Tajikistan) Community Tourism Committee (Kyrgyzstan) Cornell Biological Field Station at Shackleton Point Deutsche Gessellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbait (GIZ) FOCUS Humanitarian Assistance (Tajikistan) International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development (ICIMOD) International Society of Biometeorology – Phenology Commission International Union for Conservation of Nature Man and the Biosphere Programme (UNESCO) Mountain Research Initiative US Department of the Interior – Climate Science Centers US National Phenology Network Standing Rock Sioux Nation (USA) Village Organization, Roshorv (Tajikistan) Village Organization, Savnob (Tajikistan) Wakhan Pamir Research Project (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice) World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF) |