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Final Report: Designing Wabanaki Adaptive Capacity for Climate Change

Thursday, July 31, 2025

NE CASC is pleased to announce that the project, "Designing Wabanaki Adaptive Capacity for Climate Change", has been completed. An overview of the project, which was led by Darren Ranco at the University of Maine, follows below. The project's final report is also available for review.

Wabanaki Tribal Nations (Abenaki, Maliseet, Micmac, Passamaquoddy, and Penobscot) and other Tribal Nations in the Northeast CASC region will face a disproportionate impact from climate change. These impacts will affect resources such as forestry products, fish, game, wild crops, and water that are important to tribal economies and well-being. To combat this, varying levels of tribal community preparedness and the ability to build effective adaptive capacity to extreme events will be crucial for future resiliency efforts. Furthermore, there is a pressing need to work with partners who have a variety of backgrounds to plan, strategize, build and implement resiliency initiatives in tribal communities and identify innovative ways that integrate local knowledge, technology, and science in a manner that traditional and cultural identities are tied.

Using Indigenous Research Methods, Native American Programs at the University of Maine identified key research questions, data collection methods, outputs, and research protocols with Wabanaki people, knowledge, and values to build a regional tribal network for climate change adaptation and create a Wabanaki climate adaptation and adaptive management workbook called Wolankeyutomuk: A Wabanaki Intertribal Climate Change Adaptation Guidebook (WICCAK). This Guidebook will inform a Regional Climate Change Tribal Network to identify research and output goals related to climate change adaptation.

The regional network consists of a diverse group of collaborators representing tribal harvesters, tribal environmental staff, intertribal and regional government entities, academic staff and tribal scholars from the University of Maine, and tribal elders and language speakers from each community that integrates a framework that includes indigenous and traditional knowledge, culture, language and history into the adaptation planning process. WICCAK identifies examples of culturally appropriate adaptative management in responding to climate change, and identify tools for future Wabanaki Tribal leaders and communities to respond to future climate changes.

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