Principal Investigator:Grogan, Paul Licensed Year(s):2024
2023
202220212019 Summary:
This licence has been issued for the scientific research application No. 5660.
The objectives of this research project are: 1) To determine the biogeochemical and ecological significance of the discovery that mesic tundra plant growth can be co-limited by nitrogen and phosphorus. 2) To predict the likely impacts of not just climate change, but also declining caribou and other mammalian herbivor...
Principal Investigator:Lafleur, Peter M Licensed Year(s):2024
2023
20212019 Summary:
This licence has been issued for the scientific research application No.5115.
The overall goal of this project is to increase our knowledge of how tundra environments interact with the atmosphere and predict how changing tundra vegetation will affect future climates. Tundra ecosystems exchange energy, water and carbon gases with the atmosphere, which are important elements of the climate system...
Principal Investigator:Chin, Krista Licensed Year(s):
2022
20212020 Summary:
This licence has been issued for the scientific research application No.5328.
The objective of this project is to collect water quality data from regionally-representative lakes that can inform resource management decisions on cumulative impacts within the Northwest Territories (NWT).
Using a computer program the research team will select 30 lakes within the Daring Lake area based on expect...
Principal Investigator:Asselin, Hugo Licensed Year(s):
2019
2018 Summary:
The three main objectives of this research are: 1) to reconstruct the multi-century history of wildfire and vegetation in the Northwest Territories by analyzing charcoal contained in lake sediments; 2) to establish the links between recent fire activity and climatic data by studying tree growth rings (annual resolution); and, 3) to combine this scientific knowledge to indigenous knowledge obtained...
Principal Investigator:English, Michael C Licensed Year(s):
2016
Summary:
The objectives are to work with local residents of Wekweeti to understand how changes in the annual snowpack may impact caribou. The idea is that with increased incursions of warm southern air into the subarctic during winter that snow crusts and ice lenses may be created in the snowpack and as a result increase the energy expenditures of the caribou when foraging for food at the base of the snowp...