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Ecocultural Attributes: Evaluating Ecological Degradation in Terms of Ecological Goods and Services Versus Subsistence and Tribal Values
Authors:Joanna Burger  Michael Gochfeld  Karen Pletnikoff  Ronald Snigaroff  Daniel Snigaroff  Tim Stamm
Affiliation:1. Division of Life Sciences, Rutgers University, Piscataway, NJ, USA.;2. Consortium for Risk Evaluation with Stakeholder Participation (CRESP), Piscataway, NJ, USA and Vanderbilt University, Nashville, TN, USA.;3. Environmental and Occupational Health Sciences Institute (EOHSI), Piscataway, NJ, USA.;4. Environmental and Occupational Medicine, UMDNJ‐Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, Piscataway, NJ, USA.;5. Aleutian Pribilof Island Association, Anchorage, AK, USA.;6. Atka Island, Aleutian Islands, AK, USA.;7. Nikolski Island, Aleutian Islands, AK, USA.
Abstract:It is becoming increasingly clear that scientists, managers, lawyers, public policymakers, and the public must decide how to value what is provided by, and is a consequence of, natural resources. While “Western” scientists have clear definitions for the goods and services that ecosystems provide, we contend that these categories do not encompass the full totality of the values provided by natural resources. Partly the confusion results from a limited view of natural resources derived from the need to monetize the value of ecosystems and their component parts. Partly it derives from the “Western” way of separating natural resources from cultural resources or values, and partly it derives from the false dichotomy of assuming that ecosystems are natural, and anything constructed by man is not natural. In this article, we explore the previous assumptions, and suggest that because cultural resources often derive from, and indeed require, intact and unspoiled natural ecosystems or settings, that these values are rightly part of natural resources. The distinction is not trivial because of the current emphasis on cleaning up chemically and radiologically contaminated sites, on restoration of damaged ecosystems, on natural resource damage assessments, and on long‐term stewardship goals. All of these processes depend upon defining natural resources appropriately. Several laws, regulations, and protocols depend upon natural resource trustees to protect natural resources on trust lands, which could lead to the circular definition that natural resources are those resources that the trustees feel they are responsible for. Where subsistence or tribal peoples are involved, the definition of natural resources should be broadened to include those ecocultural attributes that are dependent upon, and have incorporated, natural resources. For example, a traditional hunting and fishing ground is less valued by subsistence peoples if it is despoiled by contamination or physical ecosystem degradation; an Indian sacred ground is tarnished if the surrounding natural environment is degraded; a traditional homeland is less valued if the land itself is contaminated. Our argument is that intact natural resources are essential elements of many cultural resources, and this aspect requires and demands adequate consideration (and may therefore require compensation).
Keywords:Aleuts  Department of Energy  ecocultural attributes  ecological goods and services  remediation  restoration  subsistence values  tribal values
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