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Title: Addressing Tribal Risk Concerns: Application of Traditional Ecological Knowledge


1
Addressing Tribal Risk Concerns Application of
Traditional Ecological Knowledge
  • Brenda Brandon
  • TOSNAC Coordinator
  • Technical Outreach Services for Native American
    Communities

2
TOSNAC Program
  • Hazardous Substance Research Centers
  • Outreach www.hsrc.org
  • Haskell Indian Nations University
  • Haskell Environmental Research Studies Center
  • Kansas State University
  • Center for Hazardous Substance Research
  • http//www.engg.k-state.edu/CHSR/
  • Kansas University
  • Center of Indigenous Nations Studies
  • http//www.ku.edu/insp/

3
Methods of Implementing Technical Support
  • Educational Format
  • - Presentations and Written Materials
  • - Public Meetings Focused Work Groups
  • Facilitating Stakeholder Coordination
  • Scientific Opinions
  • -Document Review and Comments

4
Outline
  • Traditional Ecological Knowledge
  • Cultural Risk Concerns at Tribal Mine Sites
  • Evaluation of Western Scientific Processes-
    addressing risk concerns
  • Integration of Science and TEK long-term risk
    management within Tribal communities

5
Traditional Ecological Knowledge
  • Collective knowledge acquired by a Tribe as a
    result of the peoples interaction with the
    environment and occupation of a region over many
    generations
  • Applied to resource management decision-making
    structures
  • Fisheries, wildlife, fire and water resource
  • Agriculture and mining projects
  • Environmental impact statements, health studies

6
Western Science TEK
  • One track thinking
  • Focus on physical concerns
  • Values based on scientific measures
  • Man is treated separate from environment
  • Ethics- separate component
  • Use of quantitative interpretation to analyze and
    communicate risk
  • Holistic thinking
  • Priorities encompass all levels of reality
  • Values based on survival of Culture
  • Man is a component of the environment
  • Ethics are incorporated into tradition
  • Communication of concerns typically have
    qualitative focus

7
Study of Contaminants in Environmental Systems-
Impact of Contaminants in Specific Media
Effect of X in Air
Effect of X in Water
Effect of X in Soils
Effect of X in Biota
8
Study of Contaminants for Cleanup at Superfund
Mine Sites
Air
Ore
Surface
Water
Soils
Groundwater
Sediment
Biota
Terrestrial
Aquatic
9
Integrating Science and TEK
Effect of X in Air
Effect of X in Water
Effect of X in Soils
Understanding Impact of Contaminants
Effect of X in Biota
10
Quality of Life and Understanding Cultural Risk
Communication
  • Walking In Balance Teaching, Learning, Knowing,
    Living in Harmony with the Circle of Life
  • Physical
  • Mental
  • Psychological / Emotional
  • Spiritual

11
Environmental Impact and Cultural Risk
Considerations
Environmental Justice
Sustainability
Natural/Cultural Resources
Social Enhancement Economic Opportunity
Health Environment
12
Natural Resource Preservation Central to Tribal
Culture
  • Water quality/quantity
  • Land protection and management
  • Biota plants, animals, ecosystems
  • Other cultural resources
  • archeological, historical, ceremonial,
    recreational, fishing, hunting and gathering
    sites

13
Conventional Risk Assessment Process
  • Tool used to make decisions-
  • to protect human health
  • Involves collecting data
  • - type of hazard
  • - toxicity of contaminant
  • - exposure to contaminant
  • Involves calculating potential risk to exposure
  • (risk characterization)

14
Art and Science of Risk Characterization
Hazard Identification - probability - severity
Fate and Transport - contamination of media, -
contamination of resources
Ecological Exposure
Human Exposure
Cultural Exposure
Cultural toxicity
Ecological toxicity
Human toxicity
Risk Characterization
15
Holistic Concept of Risk Characterization
Hazard Identification - probability - severity
Ecological Exposure
Cultural Exposure
Risk Characterization
Human Exposure
Fate and Transport - contamination of media, -
contamination of resources
Ecological toxicity
Cultural toxicity
Human toxicity
16
Indigenous Concept of Risk Characterization
Hazard Identification - probability - severity
Ecological Exposure
Cultural Exposure
Risk Characterization
Human Exposure
Fate and Transport - contamination of media, -
contamination of resources
Ecological toxicity
Cultural toxicity
Human toxicity
17
TEK Teaches us about Risk Considerations
  • Aspects of Contaminants
  • Contaminant transport
  • Exposure- contact, eating, breathing
  • Affect of contaminant- health, environment and
    culture
  • Sensitive populations- infants, children,
    pregnant women, elderly, and subsistence hunters,
    fishermen and gatherers

18
Expression of CultureTribal SpecificUnique to
Tribal Identity
  • Reflects close relationship with natural
    environment

19
Tribal Specific Risk Considerations
  • Subsistence living intake level considerations
  • Culturally significant sites, plants and animals
  • Traditional ceremonial medicinal practices
  • Ecosystem Balance
  • Ecological constitution of environment, including
    human and spiritual aspects

20
Examples of Exposure Factors
Exposure Factor Urban
Subsistence
Drinking Water 2 liters per day
4 liters per day Fish Ingestion
20 pounds/yr 120
pounds/yr Game, plants
gardening 570
pounds/yr Duration of exposure 30
years 70 years
( generations)
Frequency of exposure 180 days/year
365 days/year
Cultural Activities NO
YES
Subsistence lifestyles result in 10 to 100 times
more exposure than urban lifestyles (Harper,
2001).
21
Defining Tribal Environmental Justice Concerns
Environmental Laws
Tribal EJ Lens
Natural Resources
Sustainability
Social Economic
Envt Health
Relative to Preservation of Cultural Lifestyles
and Maintenance of TEK (practices, activities)
22
Communication Dynamics Addressing Tribal
Cultural Risk Concerns
  • Human health is critical
  • Tribes consider a much broader range of
    environmental effects and risks
  • Added levels of Tribal cultural, social, and
    historical relations to land
  • Calls for effective communication between
    agencies and Tribes
  • Government to Government
  • Community Involvement

23
Risk Considerations
  • Environmental Justice considerations- multiple
    sources of contaminants
  • Multiple contaminants and complex environmental
    and biological systems
  • Bioaccumulation
  • Subsistence Lifestyle considerations
  • Cumulative Risk- including interactions amongst
    and interferences between heavy metals

24
Bioaccumulation
  • Many Metals are known to accumulate up the food
    chain
  • Soil/water
  • Microorganisms
  • Insects
  • Small Fish
  • Predatory fish/birds/mammals
  • Senior food chain animals - Man

25
Bioaccumulation- Specific to each Ecosystem and
Relationship to it
26
Selenium Impact to BiotaOne metal, one set of
impacts
  • Fish
  • Bioaccumulation of high concentrations in liver,
    muscle, and eggs
  • Primary effects are poor reproduction
  • Secondary concern would be additional
    bioaccumulation further up the food chain
  • Mammals
  • Chronic Effects
  • Hair Loss
  • Hoof Damage
  • Poor Reproductive Function
  • Copper Deficiency
  • Acute Effects
  • Lung damage
  • Heart damage
  • Birds
  • Chronic effects
  • Poor Egg Hatchability
  • Poor growth
  • Poor feather growth

27
Breathing
  • Degree to which metal occur in the air is
    dependent on its form
  • Some forms of metals vaporize more easily
  • Small particle size allows particulates to be
    dispersed more easily (dusts)
  • Burning metal contaminated materials
  • Inhaling contaminated smoke
  • Trees and other plants grown on contaminated
    sites may accumulate metals
  • Boiling contaminated waters
  • Inhaling contaminated steam
  • Aluminum, Beryllium, Cobalt, Manganese

28
Unique Respiratory Exposure Potential
  • Anything that could result in increased breathing
    of metal vapor or contaminated dusts
  • Heavy exercise in areas of high contamination
  • Smoking metal contaminated materials
  • Burning metal contaminated materials in enclosed
    areas

29
Ingestion - water
  • Surface Water
  • Groundwater
  • Metal concentrations dependent upon
  • Contamination rate
  • pH
  • Water flow rates
  • Concentrations of other minerals

30
Methyl Mercury Cycle
31
Ingestion - plants
  • Plants can accumulate a variety of metals
  • Dependent upon soil availability/solubility
  • pH
  • Metal form
  • Exchange capacity
  • Organic matter
  • Roots typically higher levels than leaves or
    fruits
  • Arsenic, Cadmium, Manganese, Nickel, Uranium

32
Ingestion Risks
  • In contaminated areas
  • Hand to mouth exposure
  • Field work
  • Hunting gathering
  • Plants and root crops
  • Surface soil contamination

33
Exposure Through Cultural Activities and Practices
  • Traditional Practices
  • Recreation- fishing, boating, swimming
  • Gathering material
  • Preparing harvest
  • Crafts and material manipulation
  • Ceremonial Practices
  • Medicinal Practices

34
Ingestion - meats
  • All meat tissues have metal concentrations
  • Meats from contamination areas may be higher than
    non-contaminated sites
  • Contaminated Animal tissues
  • Highest metal content usually in the kidney/liver
  • Muscle and fat are also high for some metals
  • Arsenic, Selenium, Thallium, Uranium, vanadium,
    and zinc

35
Unique Ingestion Exposure
  • Ingestion of highly contaminated animal tissues
  • Contaminated medicinal or ceremonial plants

36
Exposure Summary
  • There are numerous toxins
  • and ways to be exposed
  • Most exposure routes are
  • common
  • Some routes are unique to
  • a specific custom, tradition
  • and/or place
  • TEK provides foundation for understanding,
    communicating and managing cultural risk concerns

37
Elements of Tribal Risk Management Model
  • Background research-oral and written history,
    cultural and ecological resource applicability,
    archeology, scientific records
  • Examination - current state environment
  • Explicit communication of scientific information,
    incorporates traditional cultural and ecological
    knowledge into decisions

38
Tribal Community Involvement in Risk Communication
  • Tribal Council
  • Tribal Environmental
  • Natural Resources
  • Departmental staff
  • -health, water, housing
  • Locally impacted
  • community members
  • Cultural Committee Members, Elders and Youth

39
Traditional Ecological Knowledge
  • Provides foundation for development of sound
    community-based risk management practices within
    Tribal community for use over many generations

40
Value of Employing Risk Assessment and Risk
Management
  • Assess impact of proposed environmental action,
    including cleanup
  • Assess impact of environmental hazard and
    consider cumulative risks
  • Develop risk reduction strategies
  • Contribute to development of Tribal Comprehensive
    Environmental Plan
  • Community involvement in environmental
    decision-making processes

41
www.tosnac.org
  • Technical Outreach
  • Services for Native
  • American Communities
  • (TOSNAC)
  • BrendaBrandon_at_msn.com
  • Toll Free 1(866)880-2296
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