“…Community-researcher collaborations generally center around the knowledge documentation or data collection phase of the research process, where community participation is often heightened through reliance on local expertise (Dale and Armitage, 2011;Turreira-GarcĂa et al, 2018;Thompson et al, 2020). A wide variety of methods and approaches are used to compile and document Indigenous scientific knowledge regarding aquatic environmental change, including interviews, participatory mapping, focus groups, workshops, and participant and field observations (Alexander et al, 2019;Thompson et al, 2020;Alexander et al, 2021;Drake et al, in press). Western scientific data is frequently collected alongside Indigenous scientific knowledge, and can involve an equally diverse array of methods, such as mapping, telemetry, sea ice measurements, tissue sampling, or natural history observations (Alexander et al, 2019;Thompson et al, 2020;Alexander et al, 2021;Drake et al, in press).…”