UAF group receives philanthropic grant to aid Chignik region communities

Rod Boyce
907-474-7185
May 22, 2023

A University of Alaska Fairbanks coastal organization has received a $590,000 philanthropic grant to map rapidly changing watersheds of the Chignik region on the Alaska Peninsula. 

The project is in part a response to the region’s repeated salmon fishery collapses, which researchers say are partly due to alterations to fish habitat by shoreline changes and other geomorphic factors. 

The region has seen extreme high water levels related to more frequent storm flooding, causing increased erosion that has affected subsistence fishing areas and community infrastructure.

The grant from the Paul G. Allen Family Foundation will also support local workforce development, provide student research opportunities and contribute to expansion of the Chignik Intertribal Coalition, which is co-leading the project. The coalition includes Chignik Lake, Chignik Lagoon, Chignik Bay, Ivanof Bay and Perryville.

Chignik Bay, Alaska
Photo by Chris Maio
The community of Chignik Bay sits on the Alaska Peninsula.

The Alaska Coastal Cooperative is led by Chris Maio of the UAF Geophysical Institute. Matthew Balazs, postdoctoral fellow at the Geophysical Institute, is deputy director.

“Great strides have been made through the work of various government agencies to fill critical baseline data sets regarding coastal hazards,” Maio said. “However, there are still numerous gaps in information regarding local topography and bathymetry and historical trends and impacts from erosion and flooding.”

As part of the larger research effort, scientists will study the area to see if coastal terrain changes are connected to the sharp decline in salmon numbers of recent years.

Researchers will look at Black Lake and Chignik Lake, where water levels have dropped recently. Chignik Lake’s low water has affected historic subsistence fishing locations such as Clark River and Hatchery Beach, key spawning areas for salmon.

Redeposition of ash from nearby volcanoes has also reduced Chignik Lagoon’s intertidal zone to narrow channels. The lagoon’s eelgrass and kelp ecosystems serve as critical nurseries where young salmon feed and acclimate to saltwater.

The Alaska Coastal Cooperative formed in spring 2022. It serves Western Alaska, where researchers already had community relationships and where some of the greatest needs exist, but long-term plans call for the cooperative to serve all Alaska’s coastal communities.

“The ACC will serve as somewhat of a matchmaker that links locally identified priorities with the resources and partners they need to address them,” said George Anderson, president of the Chignik Intertribal Coalition. “Through this, communities can become more resilient to climate change, as the problem is much larger than any one village or agency can handle.”

The goal is to conduct research prioritized by each community to support local decision-making.

“For example, if a community is concerned about storm flooding, then we will work to align partners with expertise to address this,” said Hazel Nelson, a local consultant to the Chignik coalition.

“We will also work to provide community-based monitoring methods combined with ground surveys to measure and map this hazard,” she said.

The Alaska Coastal Cooperative chose the Chignik region for its first major project because the  Arctic Coastal Geoscience Lab of the UAF Geophysical Institute has worked with the Native Village of Chignik Bay and other Chignik coalition communities for over six years as part of the Stakes for Stakeholders community-based erosion monitoring program.  

The region’s multiple salmon fishery disasters of recent years also factored into the decision. Maio said the fisheries trouble has caused major changes in the communities such as seasonal outmigration.

“This has been hard to watch,” he said. “This project was brought about by a desire to do something positive in the region and support the local priorities for research with the goal of improving the region’s long-term outlook.”

Initial funding for the Alaska Coastal Cooperative was provided by UAF Vice Chancellor for Research Nettie LaBelle-Hamer, the UAF College of Rural and Community Development and the National Science Foundation's Permafrost Coastal Systems Network.

The Paul G. Allen Family Foundation was founded in 1988 by philanthropists Jody Allen and the late Paul G. Allen, co-founder of Microsoft. It invests in communities across the Pacific Northwest.

ADDITIONAL CONTACT: Chris Maio, Arctic Coastal Geoscience Lab, 907- 474-5651, cvmaio@alaska.edu

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