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Enhancing Climate Adaptation for Native Communities in Western Alaska: Linking Pollinator Diversity and Abundance to Berry Production in a Rapidly Changing Environment

Principal Investigator
Rachel A Loehman

Dates

Start Date
2022-06-01
End Date
2024-05-30
Release Date
2022

Summary

Berry-producing plants, a key resource in Alaska Native communities, provide primary subsistence and have been integral to maintaining cultural cohesion, sense of place, and physical ties to the surrounding landscape. Despite the importance of berry-producing plants, relatively little is known about their vulnerability to changes in climate and environmental conditions. The dynamics of insect populations are strongly related to climate; however, very little is known about the insect pollinators of berry plants in Arctic and sub-Arctic ecosystems. This interaction between plants and pollinators is critical to plant communities and for providing fruit resources to Indigenous communities. Numerous plant species depend on pollinators [...]

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Loehman_berries_AK.jpg
“Cloudberry (Rubus chamaemorus) plants and berries; Credit: Rachel Loehman, USGS”
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Project Extension

projectStatusIn Progress

Cloudberry (Rubus chamaemorus) plants and berries; Credit: Rachel Loehman, USGS
Cloudberry (Rubus chamaemorus) plants and berries; Credit: Rachel Loehman, USGS

Map

Spatial Services

ScienceBase WMS

Communities

  • Alaska CASC
  • National and Regional Climate Adaptation Science Centers

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