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Co-producing knowledge: The Integrated Ecosystem Model for resource management in Arctic Alaska

February 27, 2020

Assessments of climate-change effects on ecosystem processes and services in high-latitude regions are hindered by a lack of decision-support tools capable of forecasting possible future landscapes. We describe a collaborative effort to develop and apply the Integrated Ecosystem Model (IEM) for Alaska and northwestern Canada to explore how climate change influences interactions among disturbance regimes, permafrost integrity, hydrology, and vegetation, and how these dynamics in turn influence resource management decisions. This process emphasizes co-production of knowledge among decision makers, scientists, major funders, partners, and stakeholders. We highlight research findings based on IEM applications in Arctic Alaska, as well as successes and challenges of the co-production process. The overall framework and lessons from our work with the IEM are relevant to other collaborative efforts outside the Arctic that aim to develop a decision-support tool or an undertaking of equivalent scope.

Publication Year 2020
Title Co-producing knowledge: The Integrated Ecosystem Model for resource management in Arctic Alaska
DOI 10.1002/fee.2176
Authors Eugenie Euskirchen, Kristin Timm, Amy Breen, Stephen Gray, T. Scott Rupp, Philip Martin, Joel Reynolds, Amanda Sesser, Karen Murphy, Jeremy Littell, Alec Bennett, W. Bolton, Tobey Carman, Helene Genet, Brad Griffith, Tom Kurkowski, Mark Lara, Sergei Marchenko, Dmitry Nicolsky, Panda Santosh, Vladimir Romanovsky, Ruth Rutter, Colin Tucker, A. McGuire
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Frontiers in Ecology and the Environment
Index ID 70266785
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Coop Res Unit Seattle; Southwest Biological Science Center; Alaska Climate Adaptation Science Center
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