Project Dashboard

Status: ACTIVE SCREENING

  • NIRB File No:

    25YN045

  • Application No.:

    126355

  • Project Type:

    Scientific Research

  • Project Name:

    Arctic Coast - Nunavut Community-based Monitoring 2026/2027

Applicant
Primary Contact

Arctic Coast is a community-monitoring program, led by DFO Winnipeg that is co-developed with local hunters and trappers boards to gather baseline data on coastal fishes and their habitats. For our 2026/2027 we will be requesting support from the Arviat HTO, Aqigiq HTO, Nattivak HTA, Amaruq HTA (and Aiviq HTA if funding allows) to continue our community-based monitoring work and/or collect environmental DNA to develop a protocol with the communities to monitor the expansion of salmon (Iqaluit, Qikiqtarjuaq and Kinngait). The community-based field programs will run at different times in the Kivalliq Region (Chesterfield July 20-Sept 1 once per week for up to 5 weeks, and Arviat from July 25th-Sept 1 approximately once a week for up to 5 weeks), in which community-based technicians will be asked to conduct fieldwork for approximately one day per week within the fieldwork time range. During the summer, crews will travel by boat to the same sites to set 6 panel multi-mesh gillnets in the water, collect benthic data using a ponar grab and plankton using a vertical tow. Gillnets in both seasons will be set for a maximum of 2 hours. In the winter, monitors will travel by snowmobile to sites to set 6 panel monofilament gill nets in the water for a maximum of two hours (Arviat and Chesterfield only) or collect fishes opportunistically by hook and line. In Iqaluit we will be working with a community-based monitor and the DFO-Iqaluit office under the guidance of the Amaruq HTA to collect environmental DNA and temperature at two sites where salmon have been observed (August 19-24), at the Sylvia Grinnell River, Bay of Two Rivers and Cormack Bay to collect salmon DNA and monitor water temperature. In Qikiqtarjuaq as a component of the baseline program we will not be collecting fishes but eDNA at their established monitoring sites between September 6-28th, and potentially retrieving a temperature probe. Any fish collected using subsistence methods during the program will be measured, photographed and samples sent to DFO biologists for further analyses at the Freshwater Institute in Winnipeg. The abundance of fishes in this area in the winter is largely unknown, and it is unlikely fishes caught for subsistence in the summer will be found here (Arctic Char, Whitefish) however, if monitors are able to collect other fishes (e.g., Saffron Cod, Greenland Cod, sculpins) at these sites it will provide valuable information on seasonal biodiversity change in each region. The aim is to collect 30 individuals per species, in each community, in each season. Once the target number of individuals per species has been reached the remainder will be live released. Monitors will be asked to travel to sites and collect information over the course of a few hours and return to town at the end of the day. These sites have been selected by the respective HTOs/HTA of each community, and the aim is that the same sites will be sampled in the summer and winter months. Among all programs there will be approximately 15 days of community-based fieldwork, 7 days of DFO-led fieldwork (Iqaluit and Qikiqtarjuaq). Depending on project funds, this is an annual community-based monitoring program funded in part by Marine Conservation Targets (DFO) to support the establishment of Marine Protected Areas and Indigenous Protected Conservation Areas.

Assessment Phase / Activity
  • Application screening started 2026-03-09
Region
  • Kivalliq
  • South Baffin
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