Media releases

  • Brock experts discuss environmental, logistical impacts of wildfires

    EXPERT ADVISORY: Aug 21 2023 – R0071

    Out-of-control wildfires in British Columbia and the Northwest Territories are not only destroying properties but also altering natural environments and calling attention to the ways natural disasters are handled, say Brock University environmental researchers.

    While poor air quality is an easily recognizable impact, “the effects of these fires on water quality are quite profound,” says Assistant Professor of Chemistry Vaughn Mangal.

    Forests hold large quantities of organic carbon and chemical compounds such as nitrates and phosphates that are nutritious for plant life, but also contain contaminants like mercury and cadmium that are harmful for plants and human health.

    Mangal says forest fires can transport mercury to aquatic systems. Along with inputs of organic carbon and nutrients, microorganisms can create a chemical called methylmercury, a neurotoxin to humans and animals that can accumulate in fish across water sources.

    The physical debris from forest fires also changes the types of carbon found in aquatic systems, says Mangal.

    “For example, when ash settles and debris deposits onto the water, it increases the carbon and contaminant presence in the water causing the water to be darker, more turbid and more odorous,” he says.

    This increased organic carbon in the water can lead to the growth of algae blooms that remove much-needed oxygen from water and can also produce more greenhouse gases, further contributing to climate change, he says.

    Also contributing to greenhouse gases is carbon being released from thawing permafrost, says Professor of Geography and Tourism Studies Michael Pisaric.

    Permafrost, or ground that is permanently frozen from one year to the next, is a dominant feature of Canada’s North.

    “Forest fires burning in regions underlain by permafrost disturb the vegetation cover, hastening permafrost degradation and thaw,” says Pisaric, adding that carbon trapped in permafrost decomposes when thawed.

    Intense fires burn more deeply into the organic layers of soil, which makes soil less porous, he says. This affects the ability of soils to effectively channel water into the ground, potentially impacting the types of vegetation that can re-establish after a fire.

    In some cases, fires are recurring so frequently in recent decades that some long-lived vegetation types are not able to establish and reproduce before the next fire occurs, Pisaric says.

    “Studies near Yellowknife and in parts of Yukon Territory are showing that in severely burned areas, some of the typical conifer species that characterize Canada’s boreal regions are having difficulties re-establishing following these severe fire events due to the increased moisture stress that occurs in these severely burned areas,” he says.

    Residents in the Northwest Territories and British Columbia are grappling with the impacts of having to flee their homes on short notice, putting the spotlight on how authorities deal with forest fires.

    “The transfer and co-ordination of authority and management between the local and provincial levels is challenging, as it is negotiated in real time and as the situation is extremely unpredictable,” says Associate Professor of the Environmental Sustainability Research Centre Julia Baird.

    Baird, Canada Research Chair in Human Dimensions of Water Resources and Water Resilience, and her colleagues conducted research on major wildfires in Alberta and Sweden.

    “What we learned was that it is really important to build relationships in advance of an emergency, as those relationships yield benefits when needed — for example, an emergency responder can capitalize on existing connections and very quickly have the necessary information to a critical question,” says Baird.

    She says clear procedures with built-in flexibility can support the scale-up of an emergency response.

    “Evacuation and meeting the physical needs of evacuees is interconnected with logistics and supply, as the needs of the evacuation centres and resources available are constantly in interplay and offers of assistance must be co-ordinated with need levels,” Baird says.

    “Another example is the task of communication to the public and evacuation, where those being evacuated need timely information about where to go, and the information itself depends on capacity and fire forecasts.”

    Brock University Assistant Professor of Chemistry Vaughn Mangal, Professor of Geography and Tourism Studies Michael Pisaric and Associate Professor of the Environmental Sustainability Research Centre Julia Baird are available for media interviews on the topic.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Maryanne St. Denis, Manager, Content and Communications, Brock University mstdenis@brocku.ca or 905-246-0256

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Brock houses Ontario behavioural research hub as part of national initiative

    MEDIA RELEASE: Aug 18 2023 – R0070

    Brock University has been selected as the Ontario hub of a Canada-wide program that trains students and novice researchers on how to evaluate behaviour-change initiatives in health care.

    “Clinical trials are often designed for testing new drugs in the pharma industry,” says Assistant Professor of Kinesiology Sean Locke, who chairs the Ontario hub. “We want to provide students with the same knowledge and training to conduct behavioural trials for research that would lead to developing programs for diabetes prevention, cardiac rehab, smoking cessation or lowered obesity.”

    The hub is the central Ontario component of the Canadian Behavioural Interventions and Trials Network Training Platform, a countrywide, $5-million initiative funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) and partners who are providing cash and in-kind support.

    Headquartered at Concordia University in Montreal, the research team co-led by Locke and eight other researchers is developing training programs that will give graduate students, post-doctoral fellows, and medical and health trainees knowledge and skills to evaluate behaviour-change interventions.

    There will also be training on how to integrate these interventions into health-care practice.

    More than 70 partners from the health-care sector, community organizations, government and post-secondary institutions are collaborating to create and deliver the training programs, which teach how to co-ordinate and facilitate behaviour-change clinical trials.

    “There have been thousands of studies to understand the psychology of behaviour change,” says Locke. “Behavioural interventions try to change the way people think about their behaviours by using strategies to get people to regulate their motivation and set goals.”

    But such initiatives are rarely integrated into the mainstream Canadian health-care system despite evidence that they are effective, says Locke. This is an oversight the countrywide project is aiming to address, he adds.

    Locke says the focus of the Ontario hub is to connect students with a wide range of health-care stakeholders. The hub provides around 12 scholarships per year for three years to fund student internship opportunities across Canada and will also host students at Brock, he says.

    “We’re really excited to build capacity, provide additional networking opportunities for students with people who work in the field of behavioural medicine, and build those cross-Canada and cross-Ontario connections,” says Locke.

    The Ontario hub is based in Brock’s Department of Kinesiology, with collaborations led by Professor of Health Sciences Deborah O’Leary, Associate Professor and Canada Research Chair in Adjustment and Well-Being in Children and Youth Danielle Sirianni Molnar, the Lifespan Development Research Centre’s Knowledge Translation Officer Jayne Morrish, and Master of Science student Isabelle Hill.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Maryanne St. Denis, Manager, Content and Communications, Brock University mstdenis@brocku.ca or 905-246-0256 

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    Categories: Media releases