Project Information

Title: Social, cultural and economic assessment of kelp mariculture opportunities for coastal villages within the EVOS spill zone 22220301

Project Year and Number: 2022: 22220301

Other Fiscal Years and Numbers for this Project: 2024: 24220301, 2023: 23220301

Principal Investigator (PI): Aaron Poe (Alaska Conservation Foundation), Kevin Berry (University of Alaska Anchorage), Willow Hetrick-Price (Chugach Regional Resources Commission), Elizabeth Hoover (University of California, Berkeley), Dune Lankard (Native Conservancy), Bren Smith (GreenWave LCC), Michael Stekoll (University of Alaska Southeast), Thomas Thornton (University of Alaska Southeast)

Managing Agency: ADFG

Assisting Personnel: None

Research Location:

Restoration Category: Research

Injured Resources Addressed: Not Specified

Abstract:

This is a 5-year project to assess how Indigenous kelp mariculture operations within the spill zone would be socially beneficial, economically viable and compatible with local cultural values of coastal communities. In the 30 years since the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill (EVOS), substantial research has been conducted to understand the status of injured species and habitats, yet less work has been directed to evaluate potential strategies that address continued social, cultural and economic impacts (i.e., injured services) to coastal communities in the spill zone. Alaska generally, and the spill zone specifically, now stand at the forefront of an emerging kelp mariculture industry that has demonstrated restorative effects such as improving water quality for ecosystems in other locations. Kelp mariculture has also shown promise to create temporary habitat at key times to buffer important species like herring and salmon from some of the rapid changes now being observed in nearshore habitats (e.g., increased acidity and warmer water temperatures). These broad ecosystem stressors are also challenging the stability of the commercial fishing industry and subsistence harvest of local communities. There is growing recognition of the thoughtful inclusion of kelp mariculture as a critical component to ensure the socioeconomic sustainability of communities in the spill zone. Understanding and establishing the potential benefits of kelp farms in the spill zone relies on baseline data collection including local, Indigenous, traditional ecological knowledge, and a focused analysis of consumer willingness to pay for kelp products from remote coastal communities. Best practices for the kelp mariculture industry will be investigated through the lens of historical ecological and subsistence food knowledge and practices, local Indigenous stakeholders, newly established and future kelp mariculture practitioners, scientists, and fishermen.

This project was approved for the FY22-FY26 funding cycle.


Proposal: View (3,949 KB)

Reports:
FY22 Annual Report: View (322 KB)

Publications from this Project: None Available

Resolutions: