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  • Welcome to Sitka Alaska. My name is Emily Noyd

  • and I came to Sitka National Historical Park as an intern for the Climate Change

  • Youth Initiative.

  • My job was to do science-based communication

  • at a historical park with primarily cultural resources.

  • The project's title was Small Park - Big Resources.

  • Little did I know the title described exactly the dilemma that smaller parks

  • are facing.

  • How can we communicate climate change? Do our visitors care?

  • It was pretty tough conducting field projects in Russian period clothing!

  • Just kidding. Most days I wore waders and spent time monitoring the park's

  • Indian River.

  • The salmon that spawn in this river year after year are the keystones of the ecosystem.

  • Their presence provides nutrients to other organisms and the surrounding

  • environment;

  • not to mention their vital role in Sitka, economically and culturally.

  • One aspect of my internship was to explore how these living representations

  • of Sitka are being threatened.

  • I conducted research on the river and contributed to a longer-term

  • data-collection effort.

  • We got up close and personal with salmon while measuring streamflow

  • and determining the health of their habitat. Understanding how much water is

  • flowing through the river tells us a lot about the snowmelt and rain

  • that feed the river each season. Thousands of salmon come home to the

  • Indian River

  • and its water level is at a crucial tipping point for supporting the strong runs

  • that we saw this year.

  • Another project we worked on was collecting dead salmon and determining

  • if they had strayed from the nearby hatchery in an effort to spawn.

  • We collected the salmon's earbones, called otoliths, which would be thermally

  • marked to indicate hatchery fish.

  • After beheading 100 salmon, I am officially an expert at otolith

  • extraction.

  • One of my other projects was water quality monitoring

  • for factors like pH, temperature and dissolved oxygen;

  • all really important in understanding the salmon habitat.

  • I monitored bat activity, looked for invasive green crabs,

  • collected mussels and helped with the fish contaminant study too.

  • The other part of my job was science outreach:

  • communicating what I learned to our visitors. Most important is what I

  • learned from them.

  • Visitors care deeply about these special places. They're curious,

  • concerned and hopeful about climate change. Website updates,

  • table talks about salmon and evening programs

  • all help start the climate change conversations.

  • With exceptional weather and a great group of coworkers

  • I managed to fit in some fun outside too. There's nothing like being on top of a peak

  • to help you put all the projects into perspective. These patches of snow

  • literally feed our river. The surrounding landscapes keep the park healthy and

  • alive.

  • Sitka has undergone a lot of changes.

  • But perhaps the most significant change is now upon us: climate change.

  • I didn't understand before what big resources a small park could have;

  • not necessarily literally but in their role as a platform for teaching about

  • climate change.

  • I'm confident other interpreters nationwide will answer the call for

  • action I hear so loudly.

  • No matter a park's size or resources, I feel strongly that this topic can and must be

  • communicated everywhere.

  • This internship has taught me that climate change must be a phrase in

  • every interpreter's vocabulary.

  • I will continue pursuing my passion for Environmental Studies in Education at

  • the University of Washington

  • and never forget the lessons that Sitka and its inhabitants

  • (human, salmon or otherwise) have taught me.

Welcome to Sitka Alaska. My name is Emily Noyd

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