Each spring and fall, birders across North America enjoy the sight of White-crowned Sparrow, Blackpoll Warbler, and other migratory species making their way to and from nesting grounds in northern Manitoba, Canada. Millions of birds rely on the Seal River watershed, a more than 19,000-square-mile expanse of wetlands, tundra, and forest鈥攔oughly the size of Vermont and Massachusetts combined. Now the Sayisi Dene, who live in the watershed, in partnership with Cree, Dene, and Inuit neighbors with interests in the area, are coming together to permanently conserve the ecosystem.
鈥淎s Indigenous people, we understand how important the watershed is to our livelihoods and futures,鈥 says Seal River Watershed Alliance director Stephanie Thorassie, a member of the Sayisi Dene First Nation. 鈥淲e also understand how important it is to the world because of the animal species at risk that migrate to the watershed.鈥
There are no permanent roads, mines, or industrial development in the area, and the alliance wants to keep it that way by convincing Canada to designate an Indigenous Protected and Conserved Area (IPCA), which would return land management to Indigenous governments. If successful, it鈥檇 be a milestone achievement: the first time multiple Indigenous nations have applied to manage an IPCA in Canada together and likely the largest in the country. Their case hinges both on traditional Indigenous knowledge and on Western science鈥檚 understanding of the watershed鈥檚 cultural and ecological significance. One important factor? Birds.
The area is a known nesting site, but Western scientists had little data from there. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a very remote part of Canada,鈥 says 爆料公社 vice president of boreal conservation Jeff Wells. 鈥淭here aren鈥檛 birders going there and putting it all into eBird.鈥
To fill those gaps, the alliance partnered with 爆料公社 to place sound-monitoring devices in bird-rich areas such as Tadoule Lake. Indigenous youth and elders selected the sites, deployed the machines in May, and collected them in July.
鈥淓ach device we took down had its own story, it was remarkable,鈥 recalls Rainer Duck, a member of the O-Pipon-Na-Piwin Cree. Two devices on a steep gravel ridge were a challenging climb to retrieve. 鈥淏ut I would love to go back and do it all over again,鈥 he adds.
The data are being processed by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, but it鈥檚 already clear they reveal a rich avian array, from Fox Sparrow to Northern Waterthrush, that make the watershed their summer home.
Thorassie hopes the recordings will help people around the world connect to the Seal River watershed, too. 鈥淲e can see it in our backyard,鈥 she notes, 鈥渂ut the songbird devices are important in helping explain to others. People in the States, for instance, may not realize the birds in their yards need our watershed to survive, to migrate to, and to nest. It gives people something to relate to.鈥
This story originally ran in the Winter 2021 issue as 鈥Data for a Cause.鈥 To receive our print magazine, become a member by .