Landscapes - People - Global change

Month: June 2023

IASNR Conference 2023

Rich Stedman, me (jet lagged, straight from the plane), and Chris Raymond at the welcome mixer.

After the PECS working group meeting in South Africa I flew directly to Portland, Maine, for the 2023 IASNR Conference. IASNR is my primary professional organization and I currently serve on its Council, so that adds an additional layer of busyness during the conference. It was particularly nice to be there with a team: postdoc Brooke McWherter, PhD student Keahna Margeson and MES Emily Snair all came along.

Co-leading the New Member’s Meeting with Bill Stewart.

The New Member’s Meeting I co-ran as part of my role as Chair of the Membership Committee was better attended than any I’ve ever seen – we were running to other rooms to steal chairs. Despite the size, we ended up having an excellent conversation about what brings people to IASNR and what it can offer.

On the first day of presentations, I was part of a panel about publishing with Society and Natural Resources and the SNR Book Series. It was exciting to be able to share the news that the external reviews are back for the decennial review of the field that I am lead co-editing with Gladman Thondhlana and Douglas Jackson-Smith and that we submitted in late January. The reviews are very supportive and we are busily doing final changes to the manuscript so that it can be published in time for the 30th IASNR next year in Cairns, Australia.

Emily Snair presenting her proposal poster

That evening at the poster session, Emily presented her proposal work that is currently undergoing research ethics review, including to some kids attending the event with their academic Mom. I also ‘won’ the big ticket item in the silent auction, a bunch of Moomin swag Chris Raymond brought from Helsinki!

Me, Emily, Jen and Elson at our ResNet panel

On day two, we held a super panel on ResNet Landscape 1 featuring Emily Wells (virtually) on Indigenous values, Jen Holzer (Brock) on collaborative networks and Elson Galang (McGill) on scenario planning. It was well attended and generated some good discussions. Keahna Margeson also presented the results of her first comprehensive exam on social license for ocean and coastal management. Brooke also co-ran a session on research ethics in diverse contexts as part of her work on the Ethics Committee of IASNR. The day concluded with a lobster bake at Peaks Island with a very mausy and foggy ferry crossing.

Day three was a bit more restful. At the lunchtime IASNR All Member’s Meeting where I got to award the second Bridgebuilder Award to Emily Huff, again as part of my role as Membership Committee chair. That evening, Keahna ran the Quizbowl as part of her role as Student Representative Elect, and afterward we had an informal Canadian Caucus meeting at the kooky little AirBnB row house I was sharing with some of my team.

Canadian kitchen party in the AirBnB, including Emily, Jen, Ben, John, Brooke and Keahna.

On day four, I presented on the landscape culturomics work of my team, synthesizing a few recent works to advocate for a government role in ensuring researcher access to social media data for research with public good purposes. Brooke also presented some preliminary research on livestock farmers and systems thinking based on participants of the Advanced Grazing Systems (AGS) farmer mentorship program she is studying in her postdoc. The next day we spent driving back to Halifax by way of the NB farm of AGS-collaborator Cedric MacLeod where we got to see him moving his cattle to a rich new pasture. Brooke was a hero doing that big drive all in one day and I was very grateful to get back to my family after two weeks.

Happy cow on fresh pasture

June team news

Me with Emily Wells at her MES graduation reception.

I’m still catching up on a busy month’s worth of postings, and don’t want to forget to acknowledge a few big milestones. Emily Wells graduated with her MES and it was wonderful to meet her parents, over from Newfoundland for the event. Keahna Margeson finished her comprehensive exams, and Robin Willcocks Musselman started hers. Brooke McWherter led a successful SSHRC Partnership Engage Grant (PEG), partnering with the Agricultural Association of New Brunswick and the Canadian Forage and Grassland Association on Examining experiences in the process of adaptive grazing adoption: Sustainable agriculture in Canadian living laboratories. MREM intern Patrick James joined the team to work with Lara Cornejo on ResNet synthesis modelling and knowledge mobilization as well as Brooke’s PEG. Lara also presented her work at EcoSummit in Australia, and Samantha Howard presented hers at Coastal Zone Canada in Victoria as well as the Canadian Water Resources Association meeting in Halifax, back to back. (The next post will cover the IASNR conference, which was also busy for our team.) Congratulations to all!

Lara and Brooke farewelling Isabel Cotton (centre) on the Halifax waterfront.

While I was away in South Africa Isabel Cotton finished her 12-week visiting fellowship. Thanks to Lara and Brooke for giving her a proper send-off, and thanks, Isabel, for all your hard work.

Finally, in more sober news, there were some awful fires in Halifax (and elsewhere in Canada) in the weeks around my travel. Many people lost homes and many others were evacuated for long periods. I got lots of media requests because of my related work with MES Ellen Whitman in 2013 on peri-urban fire risk, that involved modelling fire risk on Halifax’s fringes. I typically push those requests to Ellen, who went on to do a PhD in Fire Science at the University of Alberta and now works for NRCan. She is an amazing scientist, and it was when looking for a few of those articles (like this one) to cite here that I learned that NRCan nominated her to represent Canadian women in science just in time for International Day of Women and Girls in Science on February 11, 2022. Belated congratulations, Ellen!

PECS working group meeting in Stellenbosch

Rafa Calderon captures a selfie of our evening stroll in Stellenbosch at the PECS working group meeting, June 2023.

I was delighted to represent NSERC ResNet at the first in-person PECS working group meeting since 2017 that was held over the first week in June in lovely Stellenbosch, South Africa. ResNet is the North American regional network of PECS, and my role was primarily to talk to PECS members about how ResNet is structured and what we are doing, and identify places of connection to individual working groups. I also was there to listen to people’s hopes for the 2024 PECS conference that is planned for Montreal next summer, which ResNet will be hosting. I spent most of my time connecting to the SES Methods and  Institutional modelling working groups, with a bit of discussion with the T4T. Thanks to Oonsie and Alta and their great team at Stellenbosch University for their generosity, and the lovely Devon Valley Hotel and Helena’s for such great food and hospitality.

Colourful Cape Town scenes.

In amidst the hard work, we were treated to a food tour of Cape Town, culminating in an amazing Cape Malay meal at the Biesmiellah Restaurant in colourful Bo-Kaap (see above, top right). If only we had been more hungry! Table Mountain remained elusive throughout, but I was struck by the scale of informal settlements we encountered. We also visited the impressive Blaauwberg Nature Reserve, a historic site of battles military and ecological. The latter is the battle against invasive Australian trees such as the wattle, which can be seen in the background of the image below (bottom left), to let the native ‘fynbos’ (or fine wood) vegetation to thrive. We heard from passionate ecologists and volunteers in persistent rainy-season weather. Later on, close to the hotel, I got to see some fynbos ecosystem with a mature protea overstory (bottom right). Before flying out I had a half-day in Stellenbosch proper, enjoying good coffee and melktert (milk tart), the botanic gardens at the university, and the Stellenbosch Village Museum, a mix between a re-enactment visit and a walking tour, with four houses restored and ‘animated’ to their period. Such museums always take me back to my teen years working at Kings Landing.

Native regeneration at Blaauwberg (left) and proteas at Stellenbosch (right).

New paper on attention transience in conservation

Figure 4 in Jaric et al. (2023) shows ways of adapting to attention transience in conservation messaging, or mitigating it to reduce the transience.

A quick note to acknowledge the long-awaited open-access publication of Transience of public attention in conservation science, a commentary in Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment lead-authored by Ivan Jaric. This is third of a series of papers I’ve joined with this interdisciplinary team of conservation scholars. As a social scientist on this team, I advocated for recognition of human cognitive limitations and the psychological burden that would be associated with attention persistence at scale. In this context, attention transience is really a way of coping with modern life without undue emotional toll. But it is shown that attention is a key input to conservation impact, so papers like this help conservation practitioners consider the causes of transience and choose humane and humanist ways to navigate it. Thanks to Ivan and the team for another fun collaborative experience.

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