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2. Evaluating the Strength of Local Legislative Frameworks to Protect Farmland: City of Richmond and Metro Vancouver, British Columbia.
- Author
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Connell, David J.
- Subjects
LOCAL government - Abstract
Copyright of Journal of Planning Education & Research is the property of Sage Publications Inc. and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
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3. Transforming First Nations’ health governance in British Columbia
- Author
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O’Neil, John, Gallagher, Joe, Wylie, Lloy, Bingham, Brittany, Lavoie, Josee, Alcock, Danielle, and Johnson, Harmony
- Published
- 2016
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4. A scoping review on barriers and facilitators to harm reduction care among youth in British Columbia, Canada.
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Beck, Kassey, Pallot, Katija, and Amri, Michelle
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YOUNG adults ,HARM reduction ,DRUG toxicity ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,YOUTH services - Abstract
Background: Progressive harm reduction policies have been implemented in British Columbia, Canada. However, youth who use drugs face barriers to receiving harm reduction care, resulting in increasing opioid-related hospitalizations and drug toxicity deaths. This scoping review collates peer-reviewed evidence to understand the barriers and facilitators faced by youth who use drugs when accessing harm reduction programming in British Columbia, Canada. Methods: This scoping review entailed conducting a systematic search of relevant databases to identify relevant articles. Articles were included if they: (i) contained youth falling between the ages of 12 and 26 years old; (ii) explored accessibility, barriers, and/or facilitators to harm reduction care or related topics; (iii) were empirical research articles using primary data (i.e., reviews, grey literature, theoretical or conceptual papers, books, etc. were excluded); and (iv) were available in the English language, given the geographic focus on British Columbia. Results: A total of 398 sources were identified and ultimately, data from 13 sources were charted and extracted. When investigating barriers to harm reduction care among youth, four themes emerged: self-stigma, service navigation, service delivery, and negative provider interactions. Furthermore, in exploring factors that facilitate harm reduction care for youth, four themes surfaced: ability to meet basic needs, positive provider interactions, social networks, and risk mitigation guidance. Conclusions: The expansion of harm reduction services in 2016 did not fully address accessibility challenges faced by youth who use drugs. Barriers continue to hinder harm reduction engagement, while supportive networks, positive provider interactions, and the ability to meet basic needs facilitated sustained access. Tailored policy interventions rooted in equity are crucial to improving access to harm reduction services for youth who use drugs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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5. Conference is Ceremony: The Centrality of Process in Community-Based Participatory Research in Music Education With Indigenous Partners.
- Author
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Prest, Anita, Goble, Scott, and Vazquez-Cordoba, Hector
- Subjects
SCHOOL districts ,COMMUNITY-based participatory research ,STAY-at-home orders ,EDUCATION conferences ,MUSIC teachers ,INDIGENOUS children - Abstract
In this paper, we highlight the centrality of process in Indigenist community-based participatory research in music education to offer new methodological insights, using a recent investigation that employed conference as research method as a case study. From our perspective as university researchers who are non-Indigenous or Indigenous but not to the land now known as Canada, we describe in detail the process of co-creating a conference grounded in local First Nations Protocols as a research method for our most recent study with Indigenous partners, also showing how the process is related to ceremony. This knowledge creation and sharing conference involved more than 200 Knowledge Keepers, School District Indigenous leaders, and music educators in British Columbia endeavouring to effectively embed Indigenous knowledge in K-12 music classes. We highlight ways we found to be relationally accountable, including providing adequate time to arrive at consensus in all decisions; developing and maintaining trust throughout pandemic lockdowns and restrictions; and locating additional sources of funding to facilitate all Protocols, which led Indigenous participants to report feeling that the conference was a culturally safe place and non-Indigenous participants to report that they found it to be a culturally immersive experience. We became more aware that the very process of discussion and decision making that took place at the many committee and subcommittee meetings leading up to the conference was part and parcel of the ceremonial aspect of this research. Indigenous participants deemed the outcomes and effects of the research/conference credible and trustworthy because they emerged from a planning process that was culturally informed and that had been deemed ethical, legitimate, and appropriate by all planning parties through consensus. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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6. Automatic detection of unidentified fish sounds: a comparison of traditional machine learning with deep learning.
- Author
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Mouy, Xavier, Archer, Stephanie K., Dosso, Stan, Dudas, Sarah, English, Philina, Foord, Colin, Halliday, William, Juanes, Francis, Lancaster, Darienne, Van Parijs, Sofie, and Haggarty, Dana
- Subjects
DEEP learning ,AUTOMATIC classification ,CONVOLUTIONAL neural networks ,ACOUSTIC transients ,MACHINE learning ,RANDOM forest algorithms - Abstract
Many species of fishes around the world are soniferous. The types of sounds fishes produce vary among species and regions but consist typically of low-frequency (< 1.5 kHz) pulses and grunts. These sounds can potentially be used to monitor fishes non-intrusively and could complement traditional monitoring techniques. However, the significant time required for human analysts to manually label fish sounds in acoustic recordings does not yet allow passive acoustics to be used as a viable tool for monitoring fishes. In this paper, we compare two different approaches to automatically detect fish sounds. One is a more traditional machine learning technique based on the detection of acoustic transients in the spectrogram and the classification using Random Forest (RF). The other is using a deep learning approach and is based on the classification of overlapping segments (0.2 s) of spectrogram using a ResNet18 Convolutional Neural Network (CNN). Both algorithms were trained using 21,950 manually annotated fish and non-fish sounds collected from 2014 to 2019 at five different locations in the Strait of Georgia, British Columbia, Canada. The performance of the detectors was tested on part of the data from the Strait of Georgia that was withheld from the training phase, data from Barkley Sound, British Columbia, and data collected in the Port of Miami, Florida, United States. The CNN performed up to 1.9 times better than the RF (F1 score: 0.82 vs. 0.43). In some cases, the CNN was able to find more faint fish sounds than the analyst and performed well in environments different from the one it was trained in (Miami F1 score: 0.88). Noise analysis in the 20--1,000 Hz frequency band shows that the CNN is still reliable in noise levels greater than 130 dB re 1 μPa in the Port of Miami but becomes less reliable in Barkley Sound past 100 dB re 1 μPa due to mooring noise. The proposed approach can efficiently monitor (unidentified) fish sounds in a variety of environments and can also facilitate the development of species-specific detectors. We provide the software FishSound Finder, an easy-to-use open-source implementation of the CNN detector with detailed documentation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. Building and communicating territorial brand values: The case of Destination British Columbia.
- Author
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F. J. Cristòfol, Francisco Javier Cristofol., Zamarreño-Aramendia, Gorka, Cruz-Ruiz, Elena, and de San Egenio-Vela, Jordi
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In today's interconnected world, effectively communicating territorial values is paramount for regions seeking to distinguish themselves globally. Effective destination branding requires carefully synthesizing cultural, historical, natural, and socioeconomic elements to create an enticing identity for tourists, investors, and locals. How a region communicates its unique attributes is crucial in shaping its perception and attractiveness in a highly competitive global market. British Columbia is a prime example of successful destination branding, thanks to its remarkable cultural diversity and breathtaking natural landscapes. BC has effectively conveyed its values and appeal to a worldwide audience through various innovative strategies and platforms. This paper explores BC's communication efforts through its website and social media, analyzing how it conveys its essence to a diverse audience and positions itself on the world stage. Ultimately, BC's success in this domain highlights the critical role of effective territorial value communication in today's globalized world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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8. The avoidance of unwanted catch and cooperation: the case of the British Columbia groundfish trawl fishery.
- Author
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Grønbæk, L, Lindroos, M, Munro, G, Pintassilgo, P, and Turris, B
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FISHERIES ,TRAWLING ,DIRECT action ,CONSORTIA ,COOPERATION ,GROUNDFISHES - Abstract
This paper focuses on a particularly successful avoidance of unwanted catch of protected, endangered, and threatened (PET) species in the form of ecologically important sponge and coral, to be found off Canada's Pacific coast. The fishery causing the unwanted catch—the British Columbia groundfish trawl fishery. A campaign to protect the sponge/coral led by environmental NGOs (ENGOs) resulted in the industry's access to the key California market being threatened. For reasons explained, the national resource manager's ability to take effective direct action had become severely compromised. The groundfish trawl fishing industry responded to the economic threat with a bottom up approach to the unwanted catch problem, by negotiating a habitat agreement with a consortium of ENGOs, with the blessing and full support of the national resource manager. The agreement, now in its tenth year of operation, has proved to be a remarkable success in avoidance of unwanted catch. The paper argues that the success rests fundamentally upon the fact that the fishers have been and are playing a stand alone stable cooperative game, which has led them in turn to play stable cooperative games with both the national resource manager and the ENGO consortium. The paper analyses the factors leading to the stand alone stable cooperative fisher game, doing so by necessity through the lens of game theory. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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9. A Generalized Semiautomated Method for Seabed Geology Classification Using Multibeam Data and Maximum Likelihood Classification.
- Author
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Parkinson, Felix, Douglas, Karen, Li, Zhen, Meijer, Annika, Stacey, Cooper D., Kung, Robert, and Podhorodeski, Anna
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OCEAN bottom ,MARINE parks & reserves ,GEOLOGICAL maps ,BACKSCATTERING ,OCEAN zoning ,REEFS ,BIOHERMS ,GAUSSIAN distribution ,GEOLOGY - Abstract
Parkinson, F.; Douglas, K.; Li, Z.; Meijer, A.; Stacey, C.D.; Kung, R., and Podhorodeski, A., 2024. A generalized semiautomated method for seabed geology classification using multibeam data and maximum likelihood classification. Journal of Coastal Research, 40(1), 1–16. Charlotte (North Carolina), ISSN 0749-0208. This paper presents a GIS-based model to perform semiautomated seabed classification that can act as a first-pass, pseudoclassified surficial geological map. The user can then edit the output into a finalized map in less time than by manual classification. The model uses maximum likelihood classification with unsupervised classification through iterative self-organizing clusters. This model is fully contained within the ArcGIS software suite as a ModelBuilder workflow composed of geoprocessing tools and Python script tools. Model inputs tested include different combinations of multibeam echosounder–derived data: slope, backscatter, and terrain ruggedness. Furthermore, to test the assumption of Gaussian distribution of input data required for maximum likelihood classification, Box–Cox power transformations were applied to slope and backscatter data and were used as model inputs. To illustrate the performance of the model, two locations are highlighted as case studies: Milbanke Sound and Spiller Channel, located on the central coast of British Columbia, Canada. Association between model outputs and ground-truth classes was generally weak to moderate when measured using Cramér's V association scores. Overall, the slope and backscatter parameter model had the highest scores of association. Results from an overlay analysis comparing model outputs with user-confirmed polygons show that the slope and backscatter model performs best in regions with distinct changes in the hardness of sediments but that in fjord regions dominated geologically by steeper bathymetric change, the slope parameter model may perform better. However, all model outputs had difficulty delineating bedrock units. The model has the flexibility to identify certain seabed habitat features as well, including glass sponge reefs—biologically active bioherms that have led to marine protected area designations in other areas of British Columbia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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10. The indignities of working with racialization: physical, emotional and familial tolls of experiencing workplace racism.
- Author
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Asey, Farid
- Subjects
FAMILIES & psychology ,WORK environment ,MINORITIES ,RESEARCH methodology ,HEALTH status indicators ,MENTAL health ,INTERVIEWING ,CULTURAL pluralism ,SOCIAL justice ,INSTITUTIONAL racism ,QUALITATIVE research ,PUBLIC sector ,EMPLOYMENT discrimination ,DIGNITY ,DATA analysis software ,SOCIAL integration - Abstract
Canada is often viewed as an oasis of multicultural inclusion where racially diverse groups could freely enjoy life in all its forms. Focusing on a group of twenty-five racialized participants working for the public sector in British Columbia (BC), this qualitative study illustrates that workplace racism is alive and prevalent in Canada. Moreover, it aims to demonstrate that this form of racism impacts not only racialized individuals who are targeted, physically and emotionally, but also their families. After presenting an outline of what constitutes racism and racialization, the article will detail and discuss findings with respect to physical, psycho-emotional and familial tolls that experiencing racial discrimination at work had exacted on racialized participants. The paper will then conclude that considering the higher expectations from public servants for not only modeling equity behavior but also upholding the rule of law, opportunities exist to more seriously address systemic racist violence against racialized workers in public sector employment contexts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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11. Settling in a Mid-sized City in the Interior of British Columbia: A Case Study of Recent Immigrants’ Housing Experiences in Kelowna (Central Okanagan Valley).
- Author
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TEIXEIRA, CARLOS and DROLET, JULIE L.
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- *
IMMIGRANTS , *REFUGEES , *HOUSING , *NEWCOMERS (Sociology) , *LAND settlement , *COMMUNICATION barriers - Abstract
In the past, immigrants and refugees tended to overlook small and mid-sized cities in Canada, but this has changed since the beginning of the 21th century, and the mid-sized city of Kelowna has gradually emerged as a popular destination for newcomers from all over the world. Housing is critical to the resettlement and integration of all immigrants. Recent immigrants, especially renters, face challenges in their settlement and housing experiences, including limited financial resources, language barriers, and rental-housing discrimination based on ethnicity or race, and yet relatively little is known about these experiences and the barriers they encounter in mid-sized cities. This paper explores the settlement and housing experiences of recent immigrants in the city of Kelowna, a mid-sized city in the interior of British Columbia (Canada) with a focus on the rental housing market. The study draws on data from questionnaire surveys administered in 2015 and 2018 with a total of 67 recent immigrant respondents. The findings reveal that immigrant newcomers experienced financial stress and significant challenges in locating affordable rental housing due to high housing costs, low vacancy rates, lack of reliable information, language barriers, and discrimination by landlords based on immigrants’ ethnic and racial background. Immigrants are increasingly redefining the social and cultural geography of mid-sized Canadian cities, and there is a need to ensure that they are able to access affordable, adequate, and suitable housing, and ultimately settle into society. This is particularly crucial given the rising cost of living in Canada, the projected increase in immigrant levels for 2023-25, and the importance of immigrant settlement in a post-pandemic context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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12. The political ecologies of fire: Recasting fire geographies in British Columbia, Canada.
- Author
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Sloan Morgan, Onyx and Burr, Judith
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FIRE ecology ,FIRE management ,TWO-spirit people ,INDIGENOUS women ,FOREST policy ,COLONIAL administration ,POLITICAL ecology ,INDIGENOUS children - Abstract
How fires burn across British Columbia (BC), Canada is shaped by settler coloniality, timber capitalism, state forestry regimes, criminalization of burning, and Indigenous resistance. Despite the urgency of confronting the fire suppression paradox embedded in settler colonial fire management laws and practices, approaches to studying fire in Canada that foreground Indigenous law and de-center settler colonial governance is scarce. As political ecologists and geographers working and living in the context of unceded and ancestral lək̓ʷəŋən, W̱SÁNEĆ, xʷməθkʷəy̓əm, Sḵwx̱wú7mesh, səlilwətaɬ, and syilx territories, we engage with Indigenous feminist scholarship to expose how coloniality and gender intersect in attempts to erase Indigenous sovereignty to structure and naturalize provincial fire policy and its emplaced impacts on Indigenous legal orders. Our analysis contextualizes settler-colonial provincial fire management policy in the purview of Indigenous legal orders to foreground how racial-colonial and gendered politics are obscured when colonial fire and wildfire practices are naturalized. Revisiting key moments in the political development of fire suppression across so-called BC, we contend that the suppression paradox is embedded in and reproduces a colonial logic that widens existing social and economic gaps. These gaps are uniquely gendered, as settler coloniality operates upon patriarchal lines that have actively attempted to erase Indigenous women and Two-Spirit peoples, including the laws and legal authorities that they possess and practice. Considering the 1910 Fulton Commission, we highlight an example of how women and Indigenous people were excluded from the political decision-making structures that shaped colonial fire management practices in BC. These gendered and racialized exclusions bear directly on the exclusion of Indigenous women and gender-diverse folx, and Indigenous legal orders guided by matriarchal lines of fire knowledge. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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13. The 'group scheme': modernisation, regionalisation, and the origins of rural public library service in British Columbia and Saskatchewan in the 1930s.
- Author
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Chapman, Laticia
- Abstract
By examining the structural-political and discursive origins of rural-serving regional public library systems in British Columbia and Saskatchewan, this paper investigates a key phenomenon in the development of the modern welfare state in Canada, the phenomenon of intra-provincial regionalisation. From the perspective of rural communities, regionalisation currently appears as part of neo-liberal strategy on the part of senior levels of government, involving a reduced commitment to social welfare and the simultaneous offloading of responsibilities onto local governments and undermining of local authority. Rural public library service in Canada, however, was often instituted through the regionalisation of that service. This paper, then, describes two moments of regionalisation in rural Canada in the twentieth century, the first, happening from the 1930s to the early 1950s with the creation of regional public library systems, contrasting sharply with the second, the experience of regionalisation in rural places since the 1980s. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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14. 'Communities are not at the periphery, rather they are at the centre of Restorative Justice in BC': an inquiry into the praxis of Restorative Justice in British Columbia, Canada.
- Author
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Asadullah, Muhammad and Morrison, Brenda
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RESTORATIVE justice ,COMMUNITIES - Abstract
There has been ebbs and flows, since 1982, with the growth of Restorative Justice (RJ) practices in British Columbia (BC), Canada. To date there are more than seventy plus organizations that offers RJ practices in BC. Using in-depth key informant interviews, along with surveys, this research seeks to understand the genesis and praxis of RJ in BC. This study finds that the local community's involvement was of paramount importance to the growth of restorative justice. Key findings include the contribution of Community Justice Initiative Langley, Community Accountability Programs and SFU's Centre for Restorative Justice. A number of emergent themes are discussed in the paper that include the role of the written RJ script, and standardization. The findings are significant for a number of reasons, first of all, it reveals the role of community, government and university collaboration. Secondly, emergent themes discussed in this paper illustrate the tensions within RJ praxis in BC where learning and growth are creating new understanding and insight. A detailed analysis on standardization debate and scripted vs non-scripted model of RJ are also discussed. This paper concludes that future research needs to focus on the relationship between restorative justice and Indigenous justice in BC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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15. Exploring Ethical Space in land use planning: a case study of the Upper Columbia, British Columbia.
- Author
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Nadeau, Maureen and Doyon, Andréanne
- Abstract
In 2019, British Columbia (BC) adopted Bill 41:
The Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act (DRIPA ).DRIPA committed BC to developing a new planning process, modernized land use planning, that involves ethical collaboration with Indigenous Peoples. Although ethical decision-making in planning theory has emerged in academic discourse, planning practitioners are missing clear frameworks to implement theory in practice. Ethical Space, a conceptual approach used to balance power between Indigenous and non-Indigenous people, may prove to be a promising implementation framework. This paper offers an exploratory application of Ethical Space for land use planning in Upper Columbia, a region in expressed need of modernized land use planning efforts. Research methods include semi-structured interviews and document analysis. Findings present recommendations for Upper Columbia governments to begin Ethical Space in land use planning. Key insights are transferable to planners with an interest in ethical collaborations between multiple governance structures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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16. The Past Is Before Us: Capitalism, Colonialism, and Canada, 1500–2023.
- Author
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Palmer, Bryan D.
- Subjects
- *
CAPITALISM , *HISTORY of capitalism , *COLONIES , *ABORIGINAL Canadians , *INDIGENOUS peoples , *ECONOMIC history , *MARXIST philosophy , *CANADIAN history - Abstract
At the "Challenging Labour" / «Le défi du travail» conference held at Mount Royal University in Calgary, Alberta, in October 2022, two plenary sessions invited scholars to engage in a dialogue on important historical and theoretical issues in the field of labour and working-class history/studies. One of these, on the entanglement of capitalism and colonialism, featured a paper delivered by Bryan D. Palmer and a response from hagwil hayetsk (Charles Menzies). These presentations are revised for publication here along with a rejoinder from Palmer in what is Labour/Le Travail's first "Forum" section. The aim of this section is to foster conversation, with scholars meaningfully engaging with each other's work across disciplinary, methodological, theoretical, or other kinds of differences in approach and understanding. The merit of this kind of dialogue is well demonstrated here by Palmer and hayetsk, and the editors would invite more such conversations for publication in this section in future issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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17. The Aleutians and Beyond: Distribution, Size Composition, and Catch Dynamics of the Aleutian Skate Bathyraja aleutica across the North Pacific.
- Author
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Grigorov, Igor V., Kivva, Kirill K., and Orlov, Alexei M.
- Subjects
WINTER ,TOP predators ,BODY weight ,OVERFISHING - Abstract
Simple Summary: Deep-water skates play an important role as top predators in the North Pacific, yet they are also considered promising targets of bottom-trawl and longline fisheries. Moreover, skates are highly vulnerable to over-fishing due to their very long lifespans, late maturation, small litter size, long incubation period, etc. Despite their ecological and commercial importance, the distribution, basic biological traits, and dynamics of abundance of many deep-water skate species remain poorly understood, information that is critical for their conservation and management. The Aleutian skate Bathyraja aleutica is one of the more common deep-water species and is widely distributed across the North Pacific, but it remains largely understudied. In this paper, we compiled and analyzed long-term data records of the Aleutian skate in the North Pacific from various databases, which revealed new information on its spatial and vertical distribution, size composition, reproductive biology, and interannual catch dynamics. The results of long-term (1948–2021) studies on the spatial and vertical distribution, dynamics of abundance, and size composition of the Aleutian skate Bathyraja aleutica in the North Pacific Ocean are presented. Maximum densities of this species were characteristic of the eastern Bering Sea slope, off the central Aleutian Islands, consisting of the Pacific waters off southeastern Kamchatka and the northern Kurils, and northeastern Sakhalin. This species was most abundant at depths of 100–600 m; in the cold months, B. aleutica migrates to greater depths for over-wintering, and in warm months it feeds at shallower depths. Bathyraja aleutica was most common at the bottom, at temperatures around 3 °C. The total length of individuals ranged from 9.6–170 cm, with a predominance of skates with a length of 50–100 cm. Males did not differ significantly from females in body weight and length. The maximum values of the condition factor were typical for the autumn–winter period. Across years, there was an increase in Aleutian skate catch rates from the western Bering Sea and the Sea of Okhotsk, and a decrease in the Pacific waters off the Kuril Islands and Kamchatka, as well as in Alaskan waters. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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18. On the peripheries of education: (not)learning about Indigenous peoples in the 1995-2010 British Columbia curriculum.
- Author
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Lamb, Christopher and Godlewska, Anne
- Subjects
IMPERIALISM ,INDIGENOUS peoples ,CURRICULUM ,SCHOOL enrollment - Abstract
This paper analyses the coverage of Indigenous topics in K-12 education in British Columbia (BC) using curriculum documents and course enrolment. It focuses on curriculum documents published between 1995 and 2010 and mandated in public education from 1995 to 2019, and argues that Indigenous topics were marginalized in the curriculum overall. Motivated by decades of work by Indigenous leaders and educators to grapple with non-Indigenous people's prejudices, ignorance, and lack of understanding, the British Columbia Ministry of Education has increasingly recognized the importance of integrating Indigenous topics into core curricula and has offered all students Indigenous Studies course options. However, coverage remained marginalized in the core curriculum and recent curricular revisions have relied increasingly on teachers' voluntary integration of Indigenous topics and meaningful consultation with local Indigenous educators and communities, for which insufficient support and resources are provided by the Education Ministry. The paper explores challenges to the curriculum's ability to combat prejudice, eliminate discrimination and promote tolerance, understanding and good relations among Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples in the province. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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19. Review of infectious agent occurrence in wild salmonids in British Columbia, Canada.
- Author
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Jia, Beibei, Delphino, Marina K. V. C., Awosile, Babafela, Hewison, Tim, Whittaker, Patrick, Morrison, Diane, Kamaitis, Mykolas, Siah, Ahmed, Milligan, Barry, Johnson, Stewart C., and Gardner, Ian A.
- Subjects
INFECTIOUS hematopoietic necrosis virus ,AEROMONAS salmonicida ,ATLANTIC salmon ,REOVIRUSES ,FLAVOBACTERIUM - Abstract
Wild Pacific salmonids (WPS) are economically and culturally important to the Pacific North region. Most recently, some populations of WPS have been in decline. Of hypothesized factors contributing to the decline, infectious agents have been postulated to increase the risk of mortality in Pacific salmon. We present a literature review of both published journal and unpublished data to describe the distribution of infectious agents reported in wild Pacific salmonid populations in British Columbia (BC), Canada. We targeted 10 infectious agents, considered to potentially cause severe economic losses in Atlantic salmon or be of conservation concern for wild salmon in BC. The findings indicated a low frequency of infectious hematopoietic necrosis virus, piscine orthoreovirus, viral haemorrhagic septicaemia virus, Aeromonas salmonicida, Renibacterium salmoninarum, Piscirickettsia salmonis and other Rickettsia‐like organisms, Yersinia ruckeri, Tenacibaculum maritimum and Moritella viscosa. No positive results were reported for infestations with Paramoeba perurans in peer‐reviewed papers and the DFO Fish Pathology Program database. This review synthesizes existing information, as well as gaps therein, that can support the design and implementation of a long‐term surveillance programme of infectious agents in wild salmonids in BC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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20. Cultural sustainability - a framework for Aboriginal tourism in British Columbia.
- Author
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Thimm, Tatjana
- Subjects
INDIGENOUS peoples ,TOURISM ,CULTURE ,SUSTAINABILITY - Abstract
This paper presents a framework to assess the cultural sustainability of Aboriginal tourism in British Columbia, which meets must take into account the protection of human rights, good self-governance, identity, control of land, the tourism product's authenticity, and a market-ready tourism product. These criteria are specified by two indicators each. The cultural sustainability framework was generated by triangulating qualitative research methods like experts' interviews, secondary research, and participant and non-participant observations. This paper is thus conceptual in nature and inductive in its approach. It partly leverages a collaborative approach, as it includes interviewees in an iterative research loop. Furthermore, the paper shows why cultural sustainability is a determinant of the success of Aboriginal tourism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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21. Diatom (Bacillariophyceae) assemblages in tidal environments of Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada.
- Author
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Sawai, Yuki, Tanigawa, Koichiro, Shinozaki, Tetsuya, Bobrowsky, Peter, Huntley, David, and Goff, James
- Subjects
DIATOMS ,NAVICULA ,TIDAL flats ,K-means clustering ,SALT marshes ,HIERARCHICAL clustering (Cluster analysis) ,SCATTER diagrams - Abstract
SUMMARY: To understand distributions of coastal diatoms along Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada, this paper describes diatom assemblages observed in 47 surface sediment samples from intertidal environments. One hundred and eighty‐four diatom taxa were identified from five transects crossing tidal flats, salt marshes, and freshwater forests in Tofino, Ucluelet, and Port Alberni. Distributions of the diatom assemblages were consistent with those reported elsewhere in the Pacific Northwest, but a few diatom taxa show different trends in their distributions. For example, one benthic species Denticula subtilis shows widespread distributions along the transect in Tofino. An ordination shown by Detrended Correspondence Analysis (DCA) using a combined dataset indicated overlapped scatter plots of diatom assemblages, suggesting that assemblages with similar species compositions are observed in more than one location. Hierarchical and k‐means clustering analyses using Euclidean distance recognized unique small groups along each transect. Rank abundance curves show different trends for richness and evenness of diatom assemblages among the five transects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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22. Rural citizen-patient priorities for healthcare in British Columbia, Canada: findings from a mixed methods study.
- Author
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Kornelsen, Jude, Carthew, Christine, Míguez, Kayla, Taylor, Matilda, Bodroghy, Catherine, Petrunia, Kathryn, and Roberts, Delia
- Subjects
PRIMARY care ,MEDICAL care - Abstract
Background: The challenge of including citizen-patient voices in healthcare planning is exacerbated in rural communities by regional variation in priorities and a historical lack of attention to rural healthcare needs. This paper aims to address this deficit by presenting findings from a mixed methods study to understand rural patient and community priorities for healthcare.Methods: We conducted a provincial survey of rural citizens-patients across British Columbia, Canada to understand their most pressing healthcare needs, supplemented by semi-structured interviews. Survey and interview participants were asked to articulate, in their own words, their communities' most pressing healthcare needs, to explain the importance of these priorities to their communities, and to offer possible solutions to address these challenges. Open-text survey responses and interview data were analyzed thematically to elicit priorities of the data and their significance to answer the research questions.Results: We received 1,287 survey responses from rural citizens-patients across BC, 1,158 of which were considered complete. We conducted nine telephone interviews with rural citizens-patients. Participants stressed the importance of local access to care, including emergency services, maternity care, seniors care, specialist services and mental health and substance use care. A lack of access to primary care services was the most pronounced gap. Inadequate local health services presented geographic, financial and social barriers to accessing care, led to feelings of vulnerability among rural patients, resulted in treatment avoidance, and deterred community growth.Conclusions: Two essential prongs of an integration framework for the inclusion of citizen-patient voices in healthcare planning include merging patient priorities with population needs and system-embedded accountability for the inclusion of patient and community priorities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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23. An anti‐racism methodology: The Native Sons and Daughters and racism against Asians in Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada.
- Author
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Baird, Ian G.
- Subjects
ANTI-racism ,SONS ,DAUGHTERS ,RACISM ,ANTI-Asian racism - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Geographer is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. D'est en ouest : premières mentions du Synageles venator (Lucas, 1836) (Araneæ : Salticidæ) en Colombie-Britannique.
- Author
-
Drapeau Picard, André-Philippe
- Abstract
Copyright of Naturaliste Canadien is the property of La Societe Provancher and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Three hundred years of snowpack variability in southwestern British Columbia reconstructed from tree‐rings.
- Author
-
Mood, Bryan J., Coulthard, Bethany, and Smith, Dan J.
- Subjects
SNOW-water equivalent ,TREE-rings ,SNOW surveys ,LA Nina ,CLIMATE change ,DROUGHTS - Abstract
Recent snow droughts in southwestern British Columbia (BC), Canada, have reduced seasonal streamflow during the typically dry late‐spring and summer months, leading to socio‐economic and ecological impacts that draw attention to the impending consequences of climate change. Knowledge of annual winter snowfall variability within this region is largely derived from a sparse network of short‐duration (≤50 years) snow survey stations. In this paper, we develop an annual April 1 snow water equivalent (SWE) reconstruction from living tree‐ring chronologies that offer a perspective on long‐term natural snowpack variability. The dendrohydrological model estimates the first principal component April 1 SWE for the southwestern regions of BC to 1711. Spectral analysis identified dominant multidecadal April 1 SWE variability over the pre‐instrumental period. The reconstruction successfully captures known instrumental period influences of La Niña oscillations on reconstructed SWE, suggesting that our tree‐ring based the reconstruction has the potential to provide insights on pre‐instrumental ocean–atmosphere links with southwestern BC snowpack dynamics. Runs analysis suggests pre‐instrumental snow droughts have been more than twice as long in duration and severity than during the observed period which indicates the instrumental record may not capture the full range of April 1 SWE variability. The reconstruction provides the first high‐resolution description of SWE over the past 300 years in southwestern BC and is of immediate use to regional water resource managers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Winter Residential Optional Dynamic Pricing: British Columbia, Canada.
- Author
-
Chi-Keung Woo, Jay Zarnikau, Alice Shiu, and Raymond Li
- Subjects
TIME-of-use pricing for electric utilities ,INDUSTRIAL efficiency ,ELECTRIC rates ,ELECTRIC power distribution grids ,INDUSTRIAL productivity ,POWER distribution networks ,TIME-based pricing - Abstract
This paper estimates the daily kWh responses on a working weekday of 1326 single-family-home residents who voluntarily participated in a residential optional dynamic pricing (RODP) pilot in the winter-peaking coastal province of British Columbia (BC) in western Canada. Based on the pilot's operation in November 2007-February 2008, we estimate that the kWh reduction in the peak period of 4-9 pm on a working weekday sans an in-home display (IHD) is: (a) 2.2% to 4.4% at time-of-use tariffs with peak-to-off-peak price ratios of 2.0 to 6.0; and (b) 4.8 to 5.3% at critical peak pricing tariffs with peak-to-off-peak price ratios of 8.0 to 12.0. The IHD approximately doubles these estimated peak kWh reductions. As BC residents already have smart meters with an IHD function, these findings recommend exploring the use of a system-wide RODP program to improve the BC grid's system efficiency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. A perfect storm or never say die: Home Economics education in British Columbia.
- Author
-
Smith, Mary Gale and de Zwart, Mary Leah
- Subjects
HOME economics ,BUDGET cuts ,HOME economics teachers ,FAMILY life education ,PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience - Abstract
This paper uses data gathered by the Teachers of Home Economics Specialist Association (THESA, 2011) with the assistance of the British Columbia Teachers' Federation (BCTF). The data suggest that factors in the province of British Columbia (BC) could have created a perfect storm to decimate Home Economics education. Despite overwhelming events such as the dismantling of tertiary level Home Economics programs and budget cuts to secondary school Home Economics (up to grade 12), Home Economics educators have consistently risen to the challenge of ensuring that education for everyday life and family living continues to be offered in BC. We attribute this to the "never say die" attitude of the community of BC Home Economics teachers, and describe their resolve as social resilience that makes them less vulnerable to factors that threaten the existence of their subject area. As a case study, this paper may provide insights for other jurisdictions facing similar circumstances and act as a point in time from which to discuss relevancy to contemporary educational events. The research project is described, and data from the project are analysed and discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
28. Transnational Modernity/Coloniality: Linking Punjab's Canal Colonies, Migration, and Settler Colonialism for Critical Solidarities in Canada.
- Author
-
RANAUTA, JASPREET
- Subjects
COLONIES ,BRITISH colonies ,CANALS ,SOLIDARITY ,INDIGENOUS ethnic identity - Abstract
This paper offers a transnational analytical framework to inform contemporary anti-racist solidarity building in what is now called Canada by engaging with migration, colonialism, and indigeneity. In particular, I trace the historical entanglements of modernity/coloniality from the British Empire's Canal Colonies project in Punjab to colonial policies in what is now called British Columbia while centring land and Indigenous sovereignty. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
29. PARENTAL LEAVE BENEFITS AND INTER-PROVINCIAL DIFFERENCES: THE CASE OF FOUR CANADIAN PROVINCES.
- Author
-
MATHIEU, SOPHIE, DOUCET, ANDREA, and MCKAY, LINDSEY
- Subjects
PARENTAL leave ,CANADIAN provinces ,INCOME & employment theory ,HISTORY & gender ,DEMOCRACY - Abstract
This paper compares access to parental leave benefits in the four largest Canadian provinces -Québec, Ontario, Alberta and British Columbia between 2000 and 2016, using quantitative data from the Employment Insurance Coverage Survey. We show that inequalities in the receipt of benefits mirror and reinforce the structure of income and gender inequalities. We argue that Alberta and Québec represent two regimes of parental benefits. In Alberta, the take-up of parental benefits is low, and is closely related to income and gender. Conversely, the vast majority of mothers and fathers have access to parental benefits in Québec. We argue that Alberta is closer to a liberal regime of parental benefits, while Québec is closer to a social-democratic model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Landslide response to the 27 October 2012 earthquake (MW 7.8), southern Haida Gwaii, British Columbia, Canada.
- Author
-
Barth, Sophia, Geertsema, Marten, Bevington, Alexandre R., Bird, Alison L., Clague, John J., Millard, Tom, Bobrowsky, Peter T., Hasler, Andreas, and Liu, Hongjiang
- Subjects
LANDSLIDES ,ROAD construction ,LOGGING ,EARTHQUAKES - Abstract
In this paper, we examine the influence of the 27 October 2012, M
w 7.8 earthquake on landslide occurrence in the southern half of Haida Gwaii (formerly Queen Charlotte Islands), British Columbia, Canada. Our 1350 km2 study area is undisturbed, primarily forested terrain that has not experienced road building or timber harvesting. Our inventory of landslide polygons is based on optical airborne and spaceborne images acquired between 2007 and 2018, from which we extracted and mapped 446 individual landslides (an average of 33 landslides per 100 km2 ). The landslide rate in years without major earthquakes averages 19.4 per year, or 1.4/100 km2 /year, and the annual average area covered by non-seismically triggered landslides is 35 ha/year. The number of landslides identified in imagery closely following the 2012 earthquake, and probably triggered by it, is 244 or an average of about 18 landslides per 100 km2 . These landslides cover a total area of 461 ha. In the following years—2013–2016 and 2016–2018—the number of landslides fell, respectively, to 26 and 13.5 landslides per year. In non-earthquake years, most landslides happen on south-facing slopes, facing the prevailing winds. In contrast, during or immediately after the earthquake, up to 32% of the landslides occurred on north and northwest-facing slopes. Although we could not find imagery from the day after the earthquake, overview reconnaissance flights 10 and 16 days later showed that most of the landslides were recent, suggesting they were co-seismic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. A data set for pollinator diversity and their interactions with plants in the Pacific Northwest.
- Author
-
Guzman, Laura Melissa, Kelly, Tyler, and Elle, Elizabeth
- Subjects
POLLINATORS ,PLANT diversity ,HOST plants ,AGRICULTURAL productivity ,VACCINIUM corymbosum ,FOOD security - Abstract
Pollinator populations have declined substantially in recent years. The resulting loss in pollination services has both ecological and economic consequences, including reductions in plant diversity and crop production and lower food security. Data sets that identify pollinators and their plant hosts are of the utmost importance for the light can shed on the main causes of pollinator declines. Here we present a data set that contains 67,954 individual pollinator records. The data were collected across the Pacific Northwest, primarily focused in British Columbia (Canada), with 182 individual sites over 11 years, between 2005 and 2017. This data set comprises multiple studies that aimed to collect information on pollinator abundance, diversity, and their interactions with plants. Overall, the data set includes 937 morphospecies (of which 482 were identified to the species level) of pollinators across 105 families, including data for bees, wasps, butterflies, moths, and flies. We also present information on the interactions of these species, with 473 species of plants. The data set is being released for noncommercial use only. Credits should be given to this paper (i.e., proper citation). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Early Chinese Migrant Religious Identities in Pre-1947 Canada.
- Author
-
Marshall, Alison R.
- Subjects
- *
OVERSEAS Chinese , *CANADIAN history , *RELIGIOUS behaviors , *SPIRITUALITY , *INSTITUTIONAL racism , *GODS , *MENNONITES - Abstract
Religion for many of Canada's earliest Chinese community was not about faith or belief in God, the Buddha, or the Goddess of Compassion (Guanyin). While the majority of Chinese migrants did not convert to Christianity or Buddhism before 1947, a very large number of them joined and became converted to Chinese nationalism (Zhongguo guomindang, aka KMT). This paper reflects on the findings of sixteen years of ethnographic and archival research to understand how sixty-two years of institutionalized racism in Canada, along with bioregionalism and the built environment, determined Chinese migrant religious identities and behaviors in Canada up to 1947. Different Canadian provinces not only had different race-based laws that restricted individual rights and freedoms, they also had varying bioregional characteristics that influenced experiences and interactions with the built environments of churches, temples, and clubhouses. Chinese migrants adapted to legislation that limited their personal rights and freedoms by being efficacious or ling by professing Christian identities in public settings. They might have made offerings to Buddhist deities and frequented Buddhist temples in their home village before migration. But in Canada, being Buddhist was associated with being Japanese, and it was efficacious to be a practicing Buddhist in private. For Canada's Chinese migrants, it was conversion to Chinese nationalism and the veneration of Sun Yat-sen that was the epitome of ling. Being a devoted member met important practical as well as spiritual needs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Green jobs for the disadvantaged in British Columbia: the perspectives of non-governmental organisations and social entrepreneurs.
- Author
-
VanWynsberghe, Robert
- Subjects
GREEN technology ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,SOCIAL entrepreneurship ,GREEN business - Abstract
This paper examines the actions and potential of green jobs for the disadvantaged, from the perspective of non-governmental organisations and social entrepreneurs. The populations of interest include: low-income, developmentally challenged, those with mental health or addiction issues, women, and First Nations. Findings indicate that green businesses and social entrepreneurs have uniquely engaged in social training and hiring strategies related to green jobs. The major challenges they face include a lack of policies that support the development of green jobs through social training and hiring. As a result of these findings, an argument is made for combining jobandlife skills for both disadvantaged populations and the agencies that serve them as well as building the capacity of employers to practise social hiring. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. A new sexually dimorphic Diploechiniscus species (Tardigrada: Echiniscidae) from Calvert Island (British Columbia, Canada).
- Author
-
Vecchi, Matteo, Guidetti, Roberto, Vincenzi, Joel, Choong, Henry, and Calhim, Sara
- Subjects
BIOLOGICAL classification ,SEXUAL dimorphism ,CHAETOTAXY ,TARDIGRADA ,SPECIES - Abstract
An important, but generally overlooked source in intraspecific variability of characters used in tardigrades taxonomy is sexual dimorphism. Dioecious tardigrades species with unisexual or bisexual populations are common, but external sexual dimorphism is rarely observed. The discovery and integrative analysis of a Diploechiniscus species population with high sexual dimorphism from Calvert Island (Canada) has allowed its description as a new species. Diploechiniscus dimorphus n. sp. is characterized by a different chaetotaxy in males and females, and by enlarged cephalic sensory appendages in the males. The discovery of this new species shows that it is important to consider sexual dimorphism as a source of intraspecific variability in tardigrade taxonomy due to its implications on the use of traits commonly used to delineate species such as chaetotaxy. Lastly, the finding of individuals of Diploechiniscus horningi (Schuster and Grigarick, 1971), a species previously synonymized with Diploechiniscus oihonnae (Richters, 1903), allows us to prove that it is genetically a separate species and to reinstate it. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Analysis of the influential factors controlling the occurrence of injection-induced earthquakes in Northeast British Columbia, Canada, using machine-learning-based algorithms
- Author
-
Esfahani, Fatemeh, Babaie Mahani, Alireza, and Kao, Honn
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Public Support for Land Acquisition: A Key Instrument for Successful Land Conservation, Governance and Management.
- Author
-
Frank, Beatrice, Walton, Michael, and Rollins, Rick
- Subjects
REAL property acquisition ,PUBLIC support ,BIODIVERSITY conservation ,POLITICAL science ,PROTECTED areas - Abstract
While it is recognized that protected areas are important for biodiversity conservation and human wellbeing, governments struggle to establish and/or enlarge protected areas. Land acquisition and the challenges encountered by governing institutions in funding protected area systems expansion is discussed in this paper using the Capital Regional District (CRD) Land Acquisition Fund as a case study. We briefly discuss land acquisition in British Columbia and in the CRD, and offer an overview of the CRD Land Acquisition Fund and the public participation process that led to its establishment. We emphasize the importance of developing political and citizen support, and a shared vision about expanding protected areas systems - a key element for nearly doubling the parkland base of CRD Regional Parks in less than 20 years. We conclude by offering the lessons learned through the case study and provide guidance for policy and governance directions with regard to land acquisition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Struggling with New Regionalism: Government Trumps Governance in Northern British Columbia, Canada.
- Author
-
Zirul, Chelan, Halseth, Greg, Markey, Sean, and Ryser, Laura
- Subjects
REGIONALISM ,RURAL development ,COMMUNITY development ,MOUNTAIN pine beetle ,PINE tree diseases & pests - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to investigate the dynamics of a (new) regionalist development process that sought to enable communities, within a rural region of British Columbia, Canada, to chart a new strategic direction for their future development. We highlight the case of the Cariboo-Chilcotin Beetle Action Coalition (C-CBAC), which formed in response to the mountain pine beetle infestation that has destroyed much of the province's pine forests. Spurred by this crisis, the C-CBAC formed to create community and economic transition strategies to cope with long-term economic restructuring and environmental change. While the coalition has achieved many admirable successes, internal governance struggles and the reliance of senior governments on traditional vehicles to distribute supports have severely hindered any regionalist potential for implementation. Ultimately, government trumped governance in this attempt to construct a new regional ideal. The paper highlights the need for 'co-constructing' new regional governance, which entails both bottom-up and top-down responsibility and coordination in the implementation of new regional development processes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
38. "Bug Wood": Climate Change, Mountain Pine Beetles and Risk in the Southeastern BRITISH COLUMBIA Logging Industry.
- Author
-
Patterson, Patrick B.
- Subjects
FORESTRY & climate ,LOGGING ,FORESTS & forestry ,MOUNTAIN pine beetle ,FOREST products industry - Abstract
Purpose -- The purpose of this paper is to analyze how the culture in the logging industry in the East Kootenay/Columbia region in British Columbia, Canada, is changing as warm winters resulting from climate change drive expansion of a native tree-killing pest, the mountain pine beetle (Dendroctonus ponderosae). Methodology/approach -- The paper is derived from historical records and 11 months of ethnographic fieldwork conducted from July 2010 to May 2011. Findings -- This analysis found that the insect outbreaks are generating a heightened sense of economic and physical vulnerability in the logging industry, undermining previous assumptions of sufficiency and confidence. Research limitations/implications -- This paper presents results from a study of a specific region, and caution should be used when comparing these results with similar phenomena in other contexts. Social implications -- The forest industry is an important employer throughout the British Columbia interior; the cultural changes documented here indicate that climate change, manifested in insect outbreaks, is generating cultural dislocation that can have negative consequences beyond the immediate economic impacts. Originality/value -- This paper provides a detailed analysis of how an unanticipated consequence of climate change is driving adjustments in a subculture in a technologically advanced society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Types of outdoor education programs for adolescents in British Columbia: an environmental scan
- Author
-
Gruno, Jennifer and Gibbons, Sandra
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. “My job was to teach”: educators’ memories of teaching in British Columbia during World War II.
- Author
-
Raptis, Helen
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY of teachers ,WORLD War II ,EDUCATION ,MEMORY -- Social aspects ,TEACHING & society ,EDUCATION policy ,WAR & education ,CHILDREN ,PRIMARY education ,SECONDARY education - Abstract
Substantial historical research indicates that during World War II Canadian schools were considered optimal sites for fostering nationalistic sentiments in teachers and learners. Policymakers directed educators and students to collect scrap metals, purchase war savings certificates, salute the flag, and undertake marching drills. These wide-reaching directives give the impression that schools were considerably reshaped during the war. Nevertheless, since much of the literature has used official information sources, such as curriculum documents and government missives, it is unclear to what extent teachers implemented such directives. No Canadian scholarship has tapped the memories of former teachers to determine their compliance in promoting nationalistic sentiments and activities. Nor have existing histories categorised activities by geographic area (such as rural versus urban; coastal versus inland) or school level (elementary versus secondary). Thus, the “unity of purpose and experience” implied by some of the literature may be overemphasised. This paper challenges the suggestion that throughout Canada all children and teachers in schools fervently engaged in nationalistic behaviour during World War II. To supplement government perspectives found in newspapers, magazines, curricular documents, and other Department of Education sources, I interviewed two dozen teachers who taught in 40 schools throughout British Columbia between 1939 and 1945. Despite policymakers’ intentions, there were many factors influencing schools’ abilities to support the war effort. These included a community’s geographic proximity or access to centres of larger war-related activity, such as munitions factories or collection stations; the values and social circumstances of families and communities; and teachers’ individual preferences, often reflecting their career stage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Magnitude estimation and site characterization in southwestern British Columbia: application to earthquake early warning
- Author
-
Babaie Mahani, Alireza, Ferguson, Eli, and Pirenne, Benoit
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Emergence and influence of a new policy regime: The case of forest carbon offsets in British Columbia.
- Author
-
Peterson St-Laurent, Guillaume, Hagerman, Shannon, and Hoberg, George
- Subjects
FORESTS & forestry ,FOREST management ,CLIMATE change ,ECONOMIC interest groupings - Abstract
The most significant carbon mitigation policy currently targeting BC’s forests is the Forest Carbon Offsets Protocol (FCOP) that outlines the rules regulating forest carbon offsets. By applying the Policy Regime Framework to the FCOP, this paper addresses the following specific questions: what is the extent of the policy change brought by FCOP, and what are the main factors that influenced and shaped this policy change? The paper concludes that policy did change: an offset regime was established and FCOP was adopted to steer the development of forest carbon offsets. It is the executive branch of government, and especially Premier Gordon Campbell, that was most influential during problem definition and the decision making around forest carbon offset policy. In addition, environmentalists and First Nations, by advocating for a conservation economy, and the private sector, by lobbying the government to prioritize their economic interests, also influenced the policy making process. However, the actual magnitude of policy change that occurred with the emergence of the forest carbon policy regime is quite limited. Apart from a few conservation and improved forest management projects that mostly benefited First Nations, very few projects have been successfully implemented to date. This limited policy change was caused by various economic, social and political limitations. In particular, the shift in government in 2011 that led to the decision not to implement a cap and trade program significantly reduced marketing opportunities for BC-based forest offsets. In addition, the negative public opinion towards the credibility and effectiveness of forest carbon offsets, the low international price of carbon, the high transaction costs and the lack of financing options strongly restrained their development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Diet of Roadkilled Western Rattlesnakes ( Crotalus oreganus) and Gophersnakes ( Pituophis catenifer) in Southern British Columbia.
- Author
-
McAllister, Jillian M, Maida, Jared R, Dyer, Orville, and Larsen, Karl W
- Subjects
RATTLESNAKES ,SNAKES -- Food ,PREDATION ,REPTILE ecology ,RARE reptiles ,REPTILES - Abstract
A critical 1st step in understanding the basic ecology of any predator is to delineate their suite of prey species. In this paper we provide data on the diet of 2 threatened snake species in British Columbia, the Western Rattlesnake ( Crotalus oreganus) and the Gophersnake ( Pituophis catenifer). By dissecting the gastrointestinal tracts of roadkilled specimens, we identified a total of 11 different prey types. Unlike what has been previously reported elsewhere for the 2 species, we found a strikingly high degree of overlap between the diets, as shown through Morisita's similarity index ( Ĉ = 0.98). The Deer Mouse ( Peromyscus maniculatus) was the most frequently identified prey type for both species, followed by shrews ( Sorex spp.). Other prey species consumed by Western Rattlesnakes were approximately even in abundance and in low numbers. Gophersnakes had a wider range of prey consumed at moderate frequencies, including voles ( Microtus spp.) and birds. We also detected prey in a relatively high percentage of our specimens, likely due to our method of analyzing roadkills rather than sampling live, free-ranging animals. These prey data contribute a better understanding of the natural history and conservation issues facing these 2 threatened snake species, providing insight into how they coexist in a habitat increasingly destroyed and fragmented by human development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. SPARGANOPHILUS (ANNELIDA, OLIGOCHAETA, SPARGANOPHILIDAE) IN NORTH AMERICA.
- Author
-
Reeves, Will K., Reynolds, John Warren, and Wetzel, Mark J.
- Subjects
CANADIAN provinces ,PUBLIC records ,OLIGOCHAETA ,ANNELIDA ,EARTHWORMS - Abstract
Copyright of Megadrilogica is the property of Megadrilogica and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
45. Stable isotopes delineate regional pelagic food web structure in British Columbia's coastal ocean.
- Author
-
Lerner, Jacob E. and Hunt, Brian P. V.
- Subjects
FOOD chains ,STABLE isotopes ,OCEANOGRAPHY ,REGIONAL differences ,STRAITS - Abstract
The pelagic food webs of British Columbia's (BC) coastal oceans have never had a comprehensive review of their trophic structure. In this study, we analyzed carbon (δ
13 C) and nitrogen (δ15 N) stable isotope ratios of pelagic food web components collected from four regions in southern BC: Juan de Fuca Strait, the Strait of Georgia, Queen Charlotte Strait, and Queen Charlotte Sound during an August 2019 survey. In addition, conductivity, temperature, and depth (CTD), chlorophyll, and nutrient data were collected to assess the oceanographic basis for regionalization. Between regions, we observed differences in the isotopic baseline driven by regional oceanography. Likewise, we also observed oceanography-driven differences in regional food chain length, carbon range, and isotopic overlap. Species-specific trophic level and isotopic niche were determined. For common pelagic species, we described how trophic level varied regionally, was not always in line with previously published dietary data, and instead largely tracked regional changes in food chain length. We conclude that variable food web properties and trophic ecology can manifest across the small spatial scales of the BC coast's discrete regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Delineating wildfire burns and regrowth using satellite imagery to assess moose (Alces alces) spatial responses to burns.
- Author
-
Mumma, Matthew A., Bevington, Alexandre R., Marshall, Shelley, and Gillingham, Michael P.
- Subjects
WILDFIRES ,MOOSE ,REMOTE-sensing images ,ANIMAL populations ,WILDFIRE prevention ,CLIMATE change - Abstract
Climate change is predicted to increase the frequency and size of wildfires. Wildfire burns can influence wildlife space use, but prior to understanding the relationship between wildlife and burns, the extent of wildfires and the regrowth of burned areas must be determined. We used remotely sensed, multispectral satellite imagery to calculate differenced normalized burn ratios (NBRs) to define areas burned by wildfire and assess temporal trends in burn frequency and extent in central British Columbia. We then used NBRs as an index of vegetation regrowth to model regrowth trajectories within burns. Next, we examined spatial responses to burns by a moose (Alces alces) population that recently declined in abundance. We utilized locations used by and available to collared moose to determine spatial responses as a function of years since wildfire and vegetation regrowth. We also assessed functional responses to burns by moose, dependent upon the proportion of burned areas available to each individual. We hypothesized that (h1) wildfire burns within our study area increased from 1985 to 2017, (h2) that moose increase their use of burns in comparison with availability as burns age as a result of vegetation regrowth, and (h3) that moose demonstrate functional responses to burns (i.e., selection of burns by individual moose declines as the amount of burned areas increases). We observed that the frequency and extent of burns are increasing within our study area. In contrast to h2, moose in summer and fall decreased the selection of burns as burns aged. We, however, observed that moose responded most positively to locations with intermediate vegetation regrowth (i.e., NBR values), which according to burn regrowth trajectories were most likely to be achieved 13 or more years post‐wildfire; given that most burns within our study area were ≤13 years of age, we predict that the use of burns will likely increase as vegetation regrows. Moose only selected for burns in fall, and we did not find support for the presence of a functional response. Our research demonstrated the utility of remotely sensed imagery and NBRs to define burn locations and to reveal current and probable future spatial responses to burns by a wildlife population of concern. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Fire severity drives understory community dynamics and the recovery of culturally significant plants.
- Author
-
Dickson‐Hoyle, Sarah, Eatherton, Arial, Baron, Jennifer N., Tiribelli, Florencia, and Daniels, Lori D.
- Subjects
WILDFIRE prevention ,FIRE management ,SPECIES diversity ,CONIFEROUS forests ,PLANT diversity ,NATIVE species ,ECOSYSTEMS ,UNDERSTORY plants ,PLANT communities - Abstract
Anthropogenic influences are altering fire regimes worldwide, resulting in an increase in the size and severity of wildfires. Simultaneously, throughout western North America, there is increasing recognition of the important role of Indigenous fire stewardship in shaping historical fire regimes and fire‐adapted ecosystems. However, there is limited understanding of how ecosystems are affected by or recover from contemporary "megafires," particularly in terms of understory plant communities that are critical to both biodiversity and Indigenous cultures. To address this gap, our collaborative study, in partnership with Secwépemc First Nations, examined understory community recovery following a large, mixed‐severity wildfire that burned in the dry and mesic conifer forests of British Columbia, Canada, with a focus on plants of high cultural significance to Secwépemc communities. To measure the effect of a continuous gradient of fire severity across forest types, we conducted field assessments of fire severity and sampled understory plants 4 years postfire. We found that native species richness and richness of species of high cultural significance were lowest in areas that burned at high severity, with distinct compositional differences between unburned areas and those that burned at high severity. These findings were consistent across forest types characterized by distinct historical fire regimes. In contrast, richness of exotic species increased with increasing fire severity in the dominant montane interior Douglas‐fir forests, with exotic species closely associated with areas that burned at high severity. Our study indicates that recent megafires may be pushing ecosystems outside their historical range of variability, with negative implications for ecosystem recovery and cultural use across these fire‐affected landscapes. We also found consistently higher plant diversity, and both native and cultural species richness, in subalpine forests. Collectively, our results provide strong evidence of the ecological and cultural significance of low‐ to moderate‐severity fire and subalpine forests, and the longstanding and ongoing role of Indigenous peoples in shaping these landscapes. As wildfires continue to impact ecosystems and human communities, this study offers novel insights into the recovery of important ecological and cultural values, while highlighting the need to support ethical research collaborations with Indigenous communities and Indigenous‐led revitalization of fire and plant stewardship. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. Assessing the relative threats from Canadian volcanoes.
- Author
-
Kelman, Melanie C. and Wilson, Alexander M.
- Subjects
VOLCANOES ,SEISMIC networks ,RISK assessment ,PRICES - Abstract
We assessed 28 Canadian volcanoes in terms of their relative threats to people, aviation, and infrastructure. The methodology we used was developed by the United States Geological Survey for the 2005 National Volcano Early Warning System. Each volcano is scored on multiple hazard and exposure factors, producing an overall threat score. The scored volcanoes are assigned to five threat categories, ranging from Very Low to Very High. We developed a knowledge uncertainty score to provide additional information about assessed threat levels; this does not affect the threat scoring. Two Canadian volcanoes are in the Very High threat category (Mt. Garibaldi and Mt. Meager). Three Canadian volcanoes are in the High threat category (Mt. Cayley, Mt. Price, and Mt. Edziza) and one volcano is in the Moderate threat category (Mt. Silverthrone). We compare the ranked Canadian volcanoes to volcanoes in the USA and assess current levels of monitoring against internationally recognized monitoring strategies. We find that even one of the best-studied volcanoes in Canada (Mt. Meager) falls significantly short of the recommended monitoring level and is currently monitored at a level commensurate with a Very Low threat edifice. All other Canadian volcanoes are unmonitored (apart from falling within a regional seismic network). This threat ranking has been used to prioritize hazard and risk assessment targets and to help select monitoring activities that will most effectively address the undermonitoring of Canadian volcanoes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. The Texas Creek landslide, southwestern British Columbia: new ages and implications for the culture history and geomorphology of the mid-Fraser River region.
- Author
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Friele, Pierre, Blais-Stevens, Andrée, and Gosse, John C.
- Subjects
FLUVIAL geomorphology ,CANADIAN history ,ROCKSLIDES ,LANDSLIDES ,VOLCANIC ash, tuff, etc. ,HOLOCENE Epoch ,MARINE debris - Abstract
The Texas Creek rock avalanche is a prehistoric deposit in the Fraser River Canyon, 17 km south of Lillooet, southwestern British Columbia, Canada. Original mapping suggested that the debris consisted of two landslides: a 45 Mm
3 event deposited after the Mazama tephra but before about 2 ka ago, and a 7.2 Mm3 event about 1.1 ka ago. The proposed timing of the younger landslide was correlated with a decline in the First Nations population and was proposed as an agent of cultural collapse driven by its impact on salmon returns vital to the population's sustenance. We provide six surface exposure ages using10 Be from boulder tops, with three samples from each surface that were originally posited to be older and younger debris. The six samples yielded similar ages suggesting the landslide deposit represents a single event with an average age of 2.28 ± 0.19 (2σ external error) ka before 1950 AD. Evidently, the landslide played no role in the cultural collapse. Fraser River Holocene incision rates, estimated pre- and post-landslide are between 13 and 24 mm/yr, consistent with previous estimates for the mid-Fraser River region. Landslide timing is coincident with the explosive eruption of Mount Meager, 120 km to the northwest, and with a possible landslide at Mystery Creek 85 km to the west and 65 km south of Mount Meager. The landslide may have been seismically triggered, but attribution is speculative. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Community Forests advance local wildfire governance and proactive management in British Columbia, Canada.
- Author
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Dickson-Hoyle, Sarah, Copes-Gerbitz, Kelsey, Hagerman, Shannon M., and Daniels, Lori D.
- Subjects
COMMUNITY forests ,WILDFIRE prevention ,WILDFIRES ,FOREST management ,WILDFIRE risk ,TRUST - Abstract
As wildfires are increasingly causing negative impacts to communities and their livelihoods, many communities are demanding more proactive and locally driven approaches to address wildfire risk. This marks a shift away from centralized governance models where decision-making is concentrated in government agencies that prioritize reactive wildfire suppression. In British Columbia (BC), Canada, Community Forests—a long-term, area-based tenure granted to Indigenous and/or local communities—are emerging as local leaders facilitating proactive wildfire management. To explore the factors that are enabling local governance approaches to managing wildfire risk, we conducted semi-structured interviews with 26 Community Forest managers across BC. Managers highlighted financial and social capacity, especially trust and relationships with both community members and government agencies, as crucial factors influencing their ability to undertake proactive management. These factors enable Community Forests to address wildfire risk not only within their own tenure area, but also at household, community, and landscape scales, while balancing diverse community values, objectives for forest management, and legal and policy obligations. Despite ongoing challenges, Community Forests emphasized the importance of scaling up their efforts to address wildfire risk and are a critical form of local wildfire governance that can help advance proactive wildfire management across BC. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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