Saturday, December 18, 2021

Marine heatwaves can decimate the oldest and youngest coral, raising concerns about the reproductive future of reefs

Marine heatwaves can decimate the oldest and youngest coral, raising concerns about the reproductive future of reefs
Bleaching coral after a major marine heatwave in Moorea, French Polynesia, in 2018. 
The dark tips indicate partial mortality. Credit: Kelly Speare

Sometimes nature surprises you. That's what happened when a massive marine heatwave took hold in the waters around Moorea, French Polynesia, in late 2018. Fortunately, UC Santa Barbara researchers turned this event into an opportunity to investigate coral bleaching.

Scientists surveyed coral around the island during and after the heatwave, recording which colonies survived and which succumbed to the heat. They found that high ocean temperatures hit the largest coral hardest, an alarming result since the biggest colonies are most fertile. What's more, the heatwave also decimated baby corals. These trends, detailed in Global Change Biology, suggest that heatwaves could entirely restructure the size distribution of corals on reefs.

"We had this big  event, and we found that it kills the corals that make the babies—the biggest corals—and it kills the corals that are the babies—the ones that have just settled on the ," said senior author Deron Burkepile, a professor in UC Santa Barbara's Department of Ecology, Evolution and Marine Biology. These groups of corals are disproportionately responsible for reef recovery.

Most shallow-water corals are symbiotic animals. They host  in their cells and receive energy from their partner's . However, this partnership can break down in a process called "" when the coral is under stress. The algae either leave or are expelled, revealing the coral's white skeleton. Although corals can recover from bleaching, the colony often will die if the stress continues.

The heatwave that began in December 2018, during the southern summer, and persisted through May 2019, "was one of the most intense marine heatwaves at our sites over the past 30 years," the authors wrote.

Marine heatwaves can decimate the oldest and youngest coral, raising concerns about the reproductive future of reefs
Kelly Speare collects data on coral health at Moorea. Credit: Allison Aplin

The researchers decided to investigate how the corals responded to this event. Divers surveyed two genera of coral at six sites, two on each of the island's three sides. The researchers categorized over 2,200 colonies into three size classes based on diameter and recorded their health.

"The results showed that for both genera, larger corals were significantly more likely to be bleached or dead than smaller corals," said lead author Kelly Speare, a doctoral candidate at UCSB. The event killed up to 76% and 65% of the largest colonies of the island's dominant coral genera, Pocillopora and Acropora.

Scientists had identified this pattern in previous bleaching events, but no one had documented it at large scale before. That said, the team wasn't expecting what they found. "We just wanted to go see what was happening," Burkepile said. "So we took data at all these different sites around the island, and this pattern fell into our laps. It really was a surprise."

The team also used coral settlement tiles to study the survival of that year's coral recruits. Speare painstakingly surveyed nearly 65 tiles in March 2019 and again in July, spending dozens of hours staring through a microscope. With these data, the team discovered the heatwave also wiped out nearly all of the baby coral. A whopping 98% of recruits died following the heatwave, compared to only 67% during the same time two years prior. "So the coral population got truncated at both ends of the size spectrum," Burkepile said.

Despite the strength of the findings, it's still an open question as to what mechanisms are driving these trends. Perhaps there are physiological differences that make large colonies more susceptible to bleaching. For example, corals exchange gases and bio-molecules with the surrounding seawater, and smaller colonies may do this more efficiently than larger ones due to their geometry. "When corals get stressed by temperature, and their algal symbionts are making free radicals and toxins, larger corals may have a harder time of getting rid of these," Burkepile said. "So they may be more likely to kick out their symbionts and bleach."

Marine heatwaves can decimate the oldest and youngest coral, raising concerns about the reproductive future of reefs
Tiny coral polyps with their symbionts, which look like brown dots. Credit: Kelly Speare

These genera of coral also contain many species that look alike that are indistinguishable to the naked eye. So it's possible that the large corals the team saw belonged to more sensitive species than the smaller corals currently present on the reef. Other researchers working at Moorea are investigating this.

Different corals also have different algal , and it's also possible that coral's microbiology may change as they grow. "All these mechanisms are not mutually exclusive," Burkepile added, "so many may be operating at once."

That said, Speare believes that different mechanisms underly the vulnerability of baby corals. "We know that the early life stage is really sensitive to all kinds of stresses," she said. These recruits are just establishing themselves and generally consist of only a few polyps. "One idea is that if small corals experience bleaching early on, then they may struggle to regain their symbiotic partners as they get older."

This is the first study to track the survival of these coral recruits on the reef. "It's especially tough to study the baby corals because they're difficult to see, and they're really difficult to follow," Burkepile said. Previous studies on baby corals have all been small-scale lab experiments.

The combined effect of losing the largest and smallest corals could be devastating to the reef. Because corals are colonies of hundreds or thousands of individual animals, larger ones have greater reproductive capacity, or fecundity. "So if we shift to a community of corals that's much smaller, that community is going to produce far fewer baby corals," Speare explained.

Marine heatwaves can decimate the oldest and youngest coral, raising concerns about the reproductive future of reefs
Corals make colorful fluorescent proteins to help them regulate their light environment. When the coral is bleached the fluorescence becomes more pronounced because they don't have the pigment from their symbionts. Credit: Kelly Speare

The researchers used a mathematical model to estimate how the disappearance of large colonies might affect this. "We estimate that this bleaching event reduced overall fecundity on these reefs by >58% for both Pocillopora and Acropora," the authors wrote. And the staggering mortality of baby coral only compounded this effect. "Together, these results suggest that bleaching events may compromise recovery capacity of coral reefs by disproportionately impacting the life stages most critical: Coral recruits and the largest, most fecund corals."

Understanding these patterns will help scientists model and forecast the impacts of marine heatwaves in the future. This, in turn, will teach them about how connectivity among reefs—the transport of coral larvae between locations—influences recovery after disturbances. This could help researchers pinpoint which reefs may be more resilient to  and which may deserve increased protection.

There's still much to learn about this phenomenon. The team isn't sure whether larger colonies were more likely to bleach, or simply more likely to succumb once they had bleached. Teasing apart this nuance will require more data timepoints from another large bleaching event.

"We're also trying to understand whether or not local factors—like fishing pressure and nutrient pollution—influence how well communities do during and after bleaching," Speare said, "as well as the recruitment of new individuals in subsequent years." Previous findings from the Burkepile lab suggest that managing local conditions could help  reefs persevere in the face of climate crisis.

"These findings really reinforced to me the urgency of mitigating the climate crisis," Burkepile said. "It was a surprise to us how the bleaching event so dramatically impacted these differently sized corals.

"Certainly, climate change has more surprises in store for us," he continued, "and the more of them we can avoid, the better off we will be."Coral bleaching impacts 98% of Great Barrier Reef: study

More information: Kelly E. Speare et al, Size‐dependent mortality of corals during marine heatwave erodes recovery capacity of a coral reef, Global Change Biology (2021). DOI: 10.1111/gcb.16000

Journal information: Global Change Biology 

Provided by University of California - Santa Barbara 

Time lag between intervention and actual CO2 decrease could still lead to climate tipping point

Time lag between intervention and actual CO2 decrease could still lead to climate tipping point
Credit: William Bossen on Unsplash

A simplified mathematical model of carbon dioxide (CO2) concentrations and temperature found a "lag time" between human intervention and an actual decrease in CO2 levels. This lag time has ramifications for intervention strategies meant to avoid climate tipping points and potentially catastrophic temperature increases.

"Broadly speaking, this is a simple energy balance model that allows you to analyze various emission reduction and carbon capture strategies and their effect on climate over time," says Mohammad Farazmand, assistant professor of mathematics at North Carolina State University and corresponding author of the work. "Fully resolved  are too complex to do this sort of analytic work on."

To that end, the researchers used the mean surface temperature and CO2 concentration for Earth as a whole when creating the model, rather than attempting to account for variations in temperature and humidity across the globe.

The model, a system of stochastic delay , takes into account carbon emission and capture rates. It has two main components. First, it compares CO2 sources and CO2 sinks, either naturally occurring or manmade, to indicate the rate at which CO2 is being pumped into the atmosphere. Second, it accounts for solar radiation entering the atmosphere which is either trapped there or reflected back. Once these data were put into the model, the researchers were able to look at what happens as CO2 emission rates fall over different timescales.

"Our model shows that, even when the emission rates are reduced, the CO2 concentration exhibits a transient growth which may still instigate a climate tipping point," Farazmand says.

Transient growth is a result of delayed feedback. If CO2 is being pumped into the system, there will still be a delay between decreases in the amount entering the system and a decrease in overall CO2 levels. In fact, the delay can create a feedback loop that will increase the CO2 concentration for a short period, which could still push a system over a climate tipping point and into catastrophe.

"Think of transient growth like overcoming inertia," Farazmand says. "It's like trying to slow down an enormous train—you can't stop it all at once, there will be a delay between applying the brakes and the train coming to a halt. And in talking about CO2 levels, this could have catastrophic consequences."

The model analyzed what would happen if CO2 emissions decreased five, 10, 15, and 20 years out, and found that after the 10-year mark, transient growth would still push the climate into a tipping point, resulting in a temperature increase of 6 degrees C within 50 years.

"The model used 478 ppm of CO2 as the tipping point," Farazmand says. "This value is contested, but the numerical value isn't as important as the phenomenon of the transient growth and feedback loop."

The researchers hope that their model will be useful in understanding CO2 concentrations more broadly.

"It is important to understand that yes, at a certain level you will have catastrophic change, but even if you start working on it now you will still have increases," Farazmand says. "While this  is simpler than existing  models, we hope it can be used as a starting point for or applied to existing models to get a better picture of what is happening with CO2 concentrations."

The work appears in Proceedings of the Royal Society A.Breaching tipping points would increase economic costs of climate change impacts

More information: Alexander Mendez et al, Investigating climate tipping points under various emission reduction and carbon capture scenarios with a stochastic climate model, Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences (2021). DOI: 10.1098/rspa.2021.0697

Journal information: Proceedings of the Royal Society A 

Provided by North Carolina State University 

ULTIMA THULE

Fire and ice: The puzzling link between Western wildfires and Arctic sea ice

melting arctic
Credit: Pixabay/CC0 Public Domain

"Some say the world will end in fire," wrote Robert Frost a century ago. The poet described one popular take on the world's end before shifting to its apocalyptic opposite, writing, "some say in ice."

But the relationship between fire and ice, in terms of Earth's climate, is not quite as "either or" as Frost depicted. In the case of a study presented Dec. 16 at the 2021 AGU Fall Meeting in New Orleans, that relationship is more "give and take."

The team of researchers behind the recent study describe a link between dwindling sea ice and worsening wildfires in the western United States. As sea ice melts from July to October, sunlight warms the increasingly iceless, surrounding area. This ultimately brings heat and fire-favorable conditions to distant states like California, Washington, and Oregon later in autumn and early winter.

The researchers describe this relationship—its existence previously known, but its underlying mechanism now described for the first time—as similarly influential as climate patterns like the El NiƱo-Southern Oscillation.

"It's not a perfect analogy, but teleconnections like this are a bit like the ," said Hailong Wang, an Earth scientist at the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and coauthor of the new study. He references the popular feature of chaos theory where a butterfly's flapping wings are thought to influence the formation of a distant tornado.

"Climate conditions in one part of the world can, over time, influence climate outcomes from thousands of kilometers away," said Wang. "In our case, we find the Arctic region and the western United States are connected by this relationship. Regional land and sea surface warming caused by sea ice loss distantly triggers hotter and drier conditions in the West later in the year."

Wang presented his findings virtually at an AGU press conference exploring wildfire in a changing climate on Dec. 16.

How could ice loss in the Arctic contribute to wildfire weather in the western United States? Shifts in atmospheric circulation patterns, it turns out, come about through surface warming in an increasingly iceless Arctic. Watch this animation to learn more about the mechanism at play. Credit: Sara Levine / Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

A tale of two vortices

Wang and his fellow authors found that as Arctic sea ice melts and the surrounding land and sea surfaces warm, a  strengthens in the atmosphere above the heated area. This vortex, spinning counterclockwise like a cyclone, is spawned by differences in .

The powerful vortex constantly pushes the  out of its typical pattern, diverting moist air away from the western United States. With the now wavier jet stream nudged off its usual course, a second vortex, spinning clockwise, forms under the ridge of the polar jet above the western United States. This second vortex—similar to the vortex responsible for the Pacific Northwest's extreme heat earlier this summer—brings with it clear skies, dry conditions and other fire-favorable weather.

As the Arctic continues warming, it can sharpen the contrast between these two distantly connected systems, further exacerbating conditions in an already fire-ravaged region. More than three million acres have burned across California alone during the 2021 wildfire season.

"This dynamics-driven connection warms and dries out the western United States region," said Yufei Zou, lead author and data scientist who was a postdoc at PNNL when the study was conducted. "By uncovering the mechanism behind that teleconnection, we hope those in charge of managing forests and preparing for wildfires will be more informed."

Less ice, more heat

To probe the influence of Arctic sea ice in forming fire-favorable , the study's authors called upon the past four decades of recorded sea ice levels. The team isolated the mechanism at play through modeling conducted at the National Energy Research Scientific Computing Center, a DOE Office of Science user facility at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

Arctic sea ice has continually declined since scientists began measuring its loss in the late 1970s. End-of-summer sea ice cover has diminished by 13 percent each decade relative to the 1981-2010 average, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

Arctic sea ice is projected to continue declining, eventually leading to periods of iceless Arctic waters before the 2050s. Today, even the older, thicker ice that persists year-round is now thinner and more fragile.

In addition to Wang and Zou, authors from PNNL include Philip J. Rasch and Rudong Zhang.Study: Increasingly frequent wildfires linked to human-caused climate change

More information: Yufei Zou et al, Increasing large wildfires over the western United States linked to diminishing sea ice in the Arctic, Nature Communications (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-26232-9

Journal information: Nature Communications 

Provided by Pacific Northwest National Laboratory 

Northwest Territories drops Alberta K-12 curriculum after at least 40 years of use

N.W.T. chooses B.C. curriculum after two-year review

The Northwest Territories is dropping the Alberta school curriculum in favour of the curriculum in British Columbia. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

The government of the Northwest Territories is transitioning schools to the kindergarten to Grade 12 school curriculum used in British Columbia, ending decades of using the Alberta curriculum. 

N.W.T. Education Minister R.J. Simpson made the announcement Thursday, after his department spent two years reviewing western Canadian school curriculums to see which one best reflected the territories' educational priorities.

"We have gaps in achievement between Indigenous and non-Indigenous students," Simpson told CBC News. 

"We need to ensure that we are teaching to Indigenous students in a way that they are going to relate to and is going to be valuable to them. "

Indigenous people make up half the population of the Northwest Territories.

A February 2020 report from the auditor general showed the N.W.T. government was failing its students, Simpson said, so there is a sense of urgency in adopting a new, relevant curriculum.

B.C.'s curriculum emphasizes Indigenous knowledge, and is student-centred and flexible. The curriculum was complete and scored well on a number of metrics during the review, he said.

Curriculum criticized

The news represents a significant shift for N.W.T. students, who have been taught a revised version of the Alberta curriculum for at least 40 years. Simpson thinks the practice may go back as far as the 1940s, though.

Critics believe the switch is another blow against Alberta's much-maligned draft K-6 curriculum introduced earlier this year. 

The social studies curriculum, in particular, has been criticized for being Eurocentric and lacking in Indigenous perspectives. Experts also say the material is too advanced for younger learners. 

Earlier this week, Alberta Education Minister Adriana LaGrange announced the implementation of the curriculum in four subject areas, including social studies, is being delayed. 

Nicole Sparrow, LaGrange's press secretary, attributed the N.W.T. government's decision to a desire to adopt a curriculum that is ready to go. 

"We understand their decision to move quickly and partner with a province that has a finalized and implemented K-12 curriculum that is currently being taught in classrooms, like British Columbia," Sparrow said in an email to CBC News. 

"In contrast, Alberta is still in the early stages of the K-12 curriculum renewal process."

Meanwhile, Opposition NDP education critic Sarah Hoffman believes the N.W.T. government's decision is more evidence of why the draft curriculum should be ditched and not piloted in Alberta schools. 

"It's not appropriate for classrooms and our partners in the Northwest Territories are saying so much. They're saying moving forward with B.C. is a significant step forward," Hoffman said.

"Well, that means that Alberta is stepping backwards and our kids don't deserve that."

#DEFUNDTHEPOLICE
Edmonton Police Service to receive less funding than expected in 2022

Caley Ramsay

After hours of deliberation Wednesday, Edmonton city council voted to allocate less funding than originally planned for the Edmonton Police Service budget in 2022.

© Global News The EPS expected to see $11.9 million added to its $383-million budget. But during budget deliberations at city hall Wednesday, council instead voted to reallocate $10.9 million to social agencies.

The EPS had expected to see $11.9 million added to its $383-million budget. But during budget deliberations at city hall Wednesday, council instead voted to reallocate $10.9 million to social agencies that will help with things like mental health calls, homelessness and incidents where police may not be the best response.

Council did vote in favour of adding $1 million to the police budget, to cover staffing costs for the new National Day for Truth and Reconciliation.

Edmonton city council will look at redirecting $11M of police budget starting in 2021

Mayor Amarjeet Sohi said council made a "very balanced decision" to continue to provide resources to the police while at the same time, looking differently at community safety.

"I think Edmontonians understand that we need to have a very comprehensive, coordinated, integrated approach to community safety where policing will play a role," Sohi said.

"But at the same time, we need to make sure that we are actually reducing the need for policing services by investing into prevention, investing into housing, investing into tackling mental health issues, investing into making sure people don't live through the pain that they live through every day because of historical trauma, because of the houselessness issues, because of the opioid crisis. I think that's where we need to continue to invest more that will reduce pressure on the police for the long term."

The mayor said the city allocates 22 cents from every dollar of taxes it collects to policing.

Read more:
Edmonton police audit suggests $7.5B spent annually on social services, better collaboration required

During a presentation to council last week, police chief Dale McFee said he wasn't looking for more money. He stressed to the relatively new council that the police service is worth investing in to keep Edmontonians safe.

McFee told council last week that in the last 12 months, overall calls for service are down seven per cent. However, he said violent crimes have increased in parts of the city, especially downtown. He said resources are stretched to the limit.

In an interview with Global News on Wednesday, McFee said without the funding they expected, police will have to pull resources from elsewhere.

"Do we take beats out of certain areas that aren't busy and put them into another area? You know, we've got to get more bodies back into patrol. What do we shut down? You only have so many resources to move around," McFee said.

"It's going to impact service delivery and unfortunately, we have several communities wanting more presence, we have several communities wanting more traffic enforcement, we have several communities and people saying they don't feel safe on the LRT, which we're not the main players in that space. So all of these decisions, no matter what we do, will have an impact."

Read more:
Task force calls for Edmonton police funding freeze, more anti-racism training for officers

University of Alberta criminology professor Temitope Oriola said police should view the redirection of funding to social services as something that will, in the medium- to long-term, be beneficial for them. He said for far too long, "we have slapped a policing approach on too many social problems."

"On the one hand yes, we need to ensure that police have adequate resources to tackle the problem of crime in our society. But there are other areas that we cannot neglect. And therefore, if we provide money for mental health support and so on, we will in fact be reducing the workload on police," Oriola said.

"For far too long we have essentially used the police as the go-to for all social problems," he said. "And that is both unnecessary and unfair to police services."

The redirection of funding, Oriola said, will help to eventually reduce the number of individuals that police encounter on the streets on a daily basis, by offering them the supports they need through social welfare programs.

"Those individuals that are involved in daily and persistent interactions with the police are the individuals being serviced by the social welfare agencies. And therefore, the police should view this redirection of funding as something that would in fact help their job," he said.

"We're now at a pivotal moment in our history that everyone recognizes the pervasiveness of mental-health issues, the spread of mental-health problems, alcoholism, addictions and the increase in domestic violence and so on and so forth. We cannot police our way out of all of these issues."

Read more:

What does ‘defund the police’ really mean? Experts say confusion harming progress

Anirniq Coun. Erin Rutherford said she understands it's a polarizing debate, but believes council came to a "win-win solution."

"I feel really proud of this council. I think it sends a really strong message about who we are and the direction we're going to take going forward in the next four years."

Rutherford said council now has to look at ways to use the money that will alleviate pressure from police and help social agencies.

— with files from Sarah Komadina, Global News.

Edmonton wildlife shelter seeing rise in number of injured birds of prey

WildNorth animal shelter experiencing busiest year since opening in 1989.

Snowy owls arrive at Alberta wildlife rescue centre

3 days ago
Duration1:32
An ‘unprecedented’ number of snowy owls in need of care will stay at Wildnorth Northern Alberta Wildlife Rescue and Rehabilitation until spring. Read more: www.cbc.ca/1.6285770 1:32

Edmonton's WildNorth animal shelter is experiencing its busiest year since opening in 1989.

Four years ago, the wildlife rehabilitation centre had helped 1,500 animals. This year, it's bursting at the seams. 

"By the end of this season we expect to have admitted more than 3,500 wildlife patients," executive director Dale Gienow told CBC Edmonton's Radio Active.

About 70 per cent of the animals are birds.

Lately the shelter is seeing an influx of migratory birds on their way south for the winter.

Over the past two weeks, WildNorth has admitted 15 snowy owls, some of which are experiencing the urban environment for the first time,  Gienow says. 

"These juveniles, they have some difficulties," he says. "Sometimes they're migrating south and they're often weakened because they're not very good hunters.

"They're encountering some things that would be non-typical to where they're from." 

The owls receive extensive care from the shelter. Staff work around the clock to treat the animals, and — for the winter birds — keep them at an optimal temperature.

The wildlife rehabilitation centre has admitted 15 snow owls in the past two weeks. (David Bajer/CBC Edmonton)

Recently, the centre released a tundra swan, discovered injured near Edson, back into the wild. Tundra swans spend summers in the Arctic, before migrating to the Canadian/U.S. border and beyond.  

The centre is also receiving more calls. By 2019, WildNorth had received 8,500 calls over its 30 years of operation.

Last year alone, it received 13,000. 

With more people spending time outdoors because of COVID-19, the interaction between wildlife and humans has increased, Gienow says.

"Some 95 per cent of the creatures that are admitted to our wildlife hospital come into us to cause some sort of interaction with people."  

The more common injuries are from traffic scrapes or from coming into contact with cats or dogs, he says.

Depending on the extent of the injury, an animal can spend anywhere from a few days at the shelter to staying the winter. 

But wintering the animals puts a financial pressure on the centre. 

Listen here |
We talk to Wild North increase in birds they have been seeing. 5:30

WildNorth is the only full-scope rehabilitation centre north of Red Deer.

"All the creatures in the northern part of the province that are injured or orphaned make their way to us," Gienow said. "We are a registered charity that survives on donations, both public and private, and we count on people to find these animals directly."

The centre has had to suspend many of its in-person events and get creative with virtual fundraising.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Ishita Verma

Producer

Ishita Verma is an associate producer with CBC News in Edmonton. DM Ishita on Twitter with story tips and ideas: @ishita_verma12 or ishita.verma@cbc.ca

First Nations partner with U of A to 'pave the way' for more Indigenous doctors

Hamdi Issawi 

Six First Nations northeast of Edmonton have partnered with the University of Alberta to train more Indigenous doctors.

© Provided by Edmonton Journal On Dec. 15, 2021, the University of Alberta and Tribal Chiefs Ventures Inc., which represents six First Nations northeast of Edmonton, signed a memorandum of relational understanding to train more Indigenous doctors.

During a virtual ceremony Wednesday, the university struck an agreement with Tribal Chiefs Ventures Inc., which represents Cold Lake, Frog Lake and Heart Lake First Nations, as well as Whitefish Lake First Nation No. 128 and the Beaver Lake and Kehewin Cree Nations, to recruit, retain and produce more Indigenous health-care practitioners.


Cameron Alexis, chief executive officer of Tribal Chiefs Ventures Inc., told ceremony attendants that First Nations need more than just physicians, but all types of medical professionals, such as dentists, nurses and psychologists to break down cultural and language barriers affecting Indigenous access to health care, especially elders for whom English is not a first language.

“They’re not heard when they try to explain what their ailments are,” he said of those elders. “That’s one of the reasons why it’s very important to have our people working all-inclusive in the fields of medical science.”

The initiative will also help Indigenous youth see medical professions as viable career options, Alexis added.

“It allows us to drill down to the nations, upon successful completion of Grade 12, that this kind of career path is not impossible,” he said.

Brenda Hemmelgarn, dean of the university’s faculty of medicine and dentistry, said that students recruited and trained from First Nation communities are more likely to return to those communities and practice their professions.

“It’s not just about bringing them in and training them to be doctors,” she said. “It’s recruiting them from their home communities, it’s supporting them while they’re here, and then it’s helping them to transition back to practice in the various communities where they’re located.”

The day also marks six years since the Truth and Reconciliation Commission released 94 calls to action that recommends measures for governments, organizations and all Canadians to redress the legacy of residential schools.

Bill Flanagan, the university’s president and vice-chancellor, said the partnership will honour several of the calls to action, such as increasing the number of Indigenous health-care providers, improving cultural sensitivity and anti-racism training for health-care workers, recognizing the value of traditional healing practices, and closing the gaps in health outcomes between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people.

“We recognize that the University of Alberta has been part of historic systems that have created barriers to Indigenous health,” Flanagan said, “and we want to move forward by increasing the number of Indigenous doctors and other health-care professionals, as well as honouring and respecting traditional health knowledge.”

Recalling the barrier that curbed his own dream of working in health care, Frog Lake First Nations Chief Greg Desjarlais spoke from personal experience when telling ceremony attendants about the value of access to education, particularly for younger generations and the future of First Nations.

“I wanted to be a dentist, and I had given up a long time ago because I didn’t have the education — the math,” he said. “That’s where we have to push our children — our grandchildren — and we have to open these doors for them and pave the way for them.”

hissawi@postmedia.com

 

B.C. hears from 161 First Nations on plans for old-growth logging deferrals

BC First Nations on old-growth

The British Columbia government says it is finalizing plans with First Nations that have indicated support for plans to defer logging in certain old-growth forests, while it continues talks with nations that need more time to decide.

The province announced last month that an expert panel had mapped 26,000 square kilometres of old-growth forests at risk of permanent biodiversity loss.

It asked more than 200 First Nations in B.C. to decide within 30 days whether they supported deferrals in those areas or if the plan required further discussion.

The Forests Ministry released a statement Thursday saying it had received responses from 161 nations, with nearly three-quarters indicating they need more time to review technical information or to incorporate local Indigenous knowledge into the proposed deferral plans before making a decision.

The plan and timeline has drawn criticism from some Indigenous groups, including theFirst Nations Leadership Council, which includes the executives of the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs, the B.C. Assembly of First Nations and the First Nations Summit.

Council members issued a statement last month saying they were concerned that at-risk old growth remained unprotected while B.C. passed responsibility to First Nations without providing details on financial support to replace any potential lost revenues if the nations opted to defer old-growth logging in their territories.

The province has been following the recommendations of an independent review released last year, which found inaction could result in permanent loss for the most at-risk old-growth ecosystems, Forests Minister Katrine Conroy said last month.

The initial deferrals would last two years, Conroy said, allowing for consultation with First Nations about old-growth management in their territories. After that, old-growth forests identified as being at risk would either remain off limits for logging or be included in new, more sustainable management plans, the minister said.

Under B.C.'s plan, forest licence holders may voluntarily stop harvesting in the old-growth deferral areas, or their permits would be rescinded under the Forest Act.

The Forests Ministry said about half of the 26,000 square kilometres of at-risk old-growth forests are "not threatened by logging for the foreseeable future," while about 500 square kilometres overlap with previously approved cutting permits.

Many forestry companies have indicated they will not proceed with harvesting those areas while discussions with First Nations are ongoing, the ministry added.