Welcome to the Ignace Lab!

We are ecophysiologists, advocates, and artists studying pressing environmental problems. We study how global change (climate change, fire, and introduced pests and plants) impacts ecosystem function and Indigenous communities. 

 

Indigenous (enrolled Coeur d’Alene tribe member) Ecophysiologist

Dr. Danielle Ignace is an Assistant Professor of Indigenous Natural Sciences in the Faculty of Forestry at UBC and a Research Associate at Harvard Forest. As a broadly trained plant physiologist, ecologist, and ecosystem scientist, Dr. Ignace strives to amplify Indigenous knowledge, perspectives, and voices in science. As an advocate for underrepresented groups in science, she emphasizes science communication in transdisciplinary projects. Always seeking ways to enhance diversity and inclusion in science, she currently serves as an elected Officer for the Traditional Ecological Knowledge Section of the Ecological Society of America, the Chair of the Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion Committee for the American Society of Plant Biologists, and a member of the Resurgent Indigenous Scholars for the Environment (RISE) collective at UBC.

Dr. Ignace was a Wall Scholar for the 2022-2023 Catalyst Program at the Peter Wall Institute for Advanced Studies at UBC and a Science for Society Equity Fellow at Fair Count Inc. She has been a recipient of the Career Enhancement Fellowship for Junior Faculty from The Institute for Citizens & Scholars (formerly The Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation) and was nominated for the Technical Excellence Award from the American Indian Science and Engineering Society (AISES). She is an Associate Editor for the journal Elementa: Science of the Anthropocene, which is a trans-disciplinary, open-access journal committed to the facilitation of collaborative, peer-reviewed research.

Fostering distinctive collaborations with faculty and students to understand and communicate pressing global change problems is the hallmark of her research, teaching, YouTube channel, and ArtSci projects. As an Indigenous (enrolled Coeur d’Alene tribal member) woman in STEM, Dr. Ignace is deeply committed to developing Indigenous curriculum and her unique perspective bridges Indigenous communities, people of color, and scientists. To learn more about her background and tribe click HERE.


Lab News & Announcements

Dr. Ignace selected as a leader for the First National Nature Assessment

Dr. Ignace has been appointed by the U.S. Global Change Research Program to serve as the Chapter Lead for the Status, Trends, and Future Projections of the Drivers of Change of Nature chapter of the First National Nature Assessment (NNA1). “The National Nature Assessment is the first-ever holistic report on the status, trends, and future of U.S. lands, waters, and wildlife and the benefits they provide to our economy, health, climate, environmental justice, and national security. It is an interagency effort, bringing together experts from federal, state, and local governments, as well as the academic, non-profit, and private sectors”. More information about the first-ever U.S. National Nature Assessment and 10 other Chapter Leads can be found here.

New Paper Alert!

Mapping vegetation height and identifying the northern forest limit across Canada using ICESat-2, Landsat time series and topographic data was just published in Remote Sensing of Environment! A link to the article can be found here.

Advisory/Community Partnership Activities:

Dr. Ignace joins the committee advising the BC Conservation Fund

Dr. Ignace serves on the Interim Committee for the BC Conservation Fund. The BC Parks Foundation and the Province of BC pledged $300 million to support ecosystem health in collaboration with Indigenous communities. The committee will design the fund during the spring of 2024. More information about the fund and other committee members can be found here.

Dr. Ignace advises the Silviculture Innovation Program

Dr. Ignace serves on the Strategic Advisory Group for the Silviculture Innovation Program. This program was established by the Bulkley Valley Research Centre through a $10 million investment from the province. More information on the program can be found here and plans for our upcoming Knowledge Summit (March 2024) can be found here.

Awards:

Dr. Ignace selected as an Excellence in Ecology Scholar!

Dr. Ignace is one of four Excellence in Ecology Scholars selected by the Ecological Society of America. The ESA press release can be found here.

The students in the lab rock!

Hayley Toderian joins the lab! Hayley is working on a project with Dr. Ignace to re-imagine the Coeur d’Alene forest management plan. More info about Hayley can be found on the People Page.

Congratulations to Miah Godek (PhD student) won two awards! First, she was accepted into the Public Scholars Initiative Program. Second, she was accepted into the Climate Solutions Scholars Program. Both programs are at UBC and come with funds to support research that engages communities.

Congratulations to Gracie Crafts (MSc student) for receiving the following awards: 1- Indigenous Graduate Fellowship, 2- VanDusen Graduate Fellowship, and 3- the Paul Heller Memorial Fellowship in Forestry!

Congratulations to Tatyana Schneider (undergrad) for receiving an NSERC USRA this summer! AND…she was awarded a Canadian Forest Workforce Diversity undergraduate supplement from NSERC!

New publication introducing a new collaboration:

New Publication, “Championing inclusive terminology in ecology and evolution” out now in Trends in Ecology and Evolution! We discuss the power of terminology and outline a path forward for identifying and revising harmful terms in ecology and evolutionary biology (EEB) to foster inclusion in the field. We introduce our grassroots collective, “The EEB Language Project,” and launch our website where we compile resources, identify harmful terms being used, and provide opportunities to participate in discussions

Recent and upcoming talks:

Upcoming invited seminar on March 28, 2024: Re-imagining the Coeur d’Alene forest management plan at the University of Idaho

Invited seminar on February 12, 2024: Broadening our approach to find community-driven solutions to environmental challenges at the University of Georgia

Invited talk on December 11, 2023 for SY13A at AGU- Indigenous Science to Action: Authentic Contexts for Supporting Indigenous Priorities (Oral Session). Talk title: Global Change Impacts on Forest Ecosystems: Amplifying Indigenous Voices to Find Community Driven Solutions

Invited Keynote on November 21, 2023: Speaking on Indigeneity in Research at a workshop for the Bioproducts Institute at UBC

Invited seminar on November 10, 2023: Broadening our approach to find community-driven solutions to environmental challenges at the University of Connecticut

Invited seminar on November 2, 2023: Broadening our approach to find community-driven solutions to environmental challenges at East Carolina University

Dr. Ignace spoke at an event hosted by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine:

Indigenous Perspectives: Collaborative Approaches to Continental Scale Biology Panel 2, Paving the way for continental scale biology: Technology, techniques, and teamwork for connecting research across scales (August 21, 2023) hosted by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine. 

Dr. Ignace gave the Keynote Address: “Broadening our approach to find community-driven solutions to environmental challenge”s for the Front Range Student Ecology Symposium at Colorado State University (February 24, 2023).

Dr. Ignace gave the Keynote Workshop: “Elevating science communication and making meaningful connections with communities” for the Front Range Student Ecology Symposium at Colorado State University (February 23, 2023).

Dr. Ignace was in a special (invitation only) Ocean Tribes Gathering event alongside the IMPAC5 Congress. On this panel with Dr. Andrea Reid, Dr. Shandin Pete, and Dr. Tabitha Robin Martens, we explored global change, food systems and sovereignty, science education, fisheries rights and resurgence, and more (February 5, 2023).

Dr. Ignace gave a seminar talk “Re-imagining our relation to land and knowledge through meaningful collaborations with local Indigenous communities” for the Botany Department at UBC (January 31, 2023).

New ArtSci project for 2023:

Dr. Ignace worked with the Clyfford Still Museum as a contributing voice and audio experience collaborator for AWFUL BIGNESS, an exhibition at the Clyfford Still Museum, February 17–September 10, 2023. Check out the ArtSci page for more info.

Work and perspective featured in:

Dr. Ignace’s Indigenous perspective on land stewardship and relationship building has recently been featured in interviews for Branchlines, NPR, Nature, The Revelator, the First Person Plural: Emotional Intelligence & Beyond Podcast, and the Clyfford Still Museum.

Research on the impacts of the hemlock woolly adelgid on eastern hemlock forests has been featured on The Sweaty Penguin Podcast (Episode 102), Grist, The Revelator, Science Comedian Brian Malow Broadcast, The Daily Hampshire Gazette.

Four Indigenous projects funded:

Four projects have been funded by the UBC Indigenous Strategic Initiatives Fund that seek to develop Indigenous science courses, establish the Inaugural First Salmon Ceremony at UBC, work with Vuntut Gwitchin to meet net-zero emission targets by 2030, and develop an accredited undergraduate post-secondary certificate in natural resource conservation and land stewardship with the Haida Gwaii Institute and the Council of the Haida Nation and community partners.

New members of the lab:

Welcome Devlin Grewal working on a Master’s Degree! Check out the People page to learn more about their research interests.

Special publication announcement:

Dr. Ignace accepted an invitation to write a Tansley review on the topic of ‘Organism to ecosystem responses of invasive species, climate and pathology’ for New Phytologist. Stay tuned!

Lab YouTube Channel:

Be sure to check out Ignace Lab on YouTube for new science communication videos. YouTube ➔

First video: A teaser trailer for our new summer video series.




Check out a day in the field measuring photosynthesis at Harvard Forest featuring Lony. Lony is doing a stellar job for their REU project and makes this all look easy. Enjoy!

YouTube ➔

Check out a recent video and learn how we are using new cameras and drones to assess Eastern Hemlock tree health. Environmental Science & Policy major, Steph Long, talks us through this complicated process. Enjoy!

YouTube ➔



Summer field season = bug season! Watch this quick and fun video to see how we deal. Enjoy!

YouTube ➔