Past Work
Partnerships in practice.
A selection of recent collaborations with Indigenous and local communities, non-profits, and conservation partners — each shaped by community priorities, careful data stewardship, and long-term capacity building.
- Projects
- 5 Featured
- Methods
- GIS, Drone, Capacity
- Years
- 2022–2024
Project case studies.
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Gwich’in Tribal Council Bioregional Atlas Project.2026
● BIOREGIONAL ATLAS
A multiphase bioregional mapping initiative transforming spatial information into a living, community-guided Atlas that supports land stewardship and knowledge sovereignty.
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Taku River Tlingit: GIS Capacity Building.2023
● GIS CAPACITY
Implementing recommendations from a GIS Needs Assessment — building systems, skills, and everyday workflows for land stewardship with confidence and care.
-
Tsartlip First Nation – Community-Led Drone Training.2026
● DRONE TRAINING
An in-person drone training program focused on building safe, confident, community-led drone operations for stewardship, monitoring, and mapping.
-
Mother Tree Network – Forest Field Data Collection Tool Needs Assessment.2022
● FIELD DATA
Strengthening forest field data collection by moving beyond paper forms toward a scalable, offline-capable digital system suited to remote environments.
-
WWF / SSIGA Semiahmoo Bay Eelgrass Mapping.2024
● DRONE MAPPING
Mapping eelgrass habitat in Semiahmoo Bay using high-resolution drone surveys, with hands-on Indigenous capacity building and stewardship training.
Past collaborations.
The communities, organizations, and partners we’ve had the privilege of working alongside over the years.
Indigenous communities — 46
- Beaver First Nation
- Bella Bella Indian Band (Heiltsuk Nation)
- Bonaparte Indian Band
- Coastal First Nations
- Dokis First Nation
- Eiksan Tribe
- Fort McKay First Nation
- Fort Severn First Nation
- Gitga’at First Nation
- Gwawaenuk Tribe
- Gwich’in Tribal Council
- Halalt First Nation
- High Bar First Nation
- Horse Lake First Nation
- K’ómoks First Nation
- Kettle & Stony Point First Nation
- Kwikwetlem First Nation
- Listuguj Mi’gmaq Government
- Lower Fraser Fisheries Alliance
- Lower Nicola Indian Band
- Maiyoo Keyoh
- Métis Nation BC
- Mi’gmawei Mawiomi Secretariat
- Mikisew Cree First Nation
- Moose Cree First Nation Trapper Family
- Nipissing First Nation
- Nunavik Marine Region Planning Commission
- Penticton Indian Band
- Robinson Huron Waawiindamaagewin
- Sagamok First Nation
- Saugeen Ojibway Nation
- Saulteau First Nations
- Semiamoo First Nation
- Sioux Valley Dakota Nation
- Skwlāx te Secwepemcúl̃ecw (Little Shuswap Lake Band)
- Soda Creek Indian Band (Xat’sull)
- Songhees First Nation
- Sts’ailes Nation
- Stswecem’c Xgat’tem First Nation
- Taku River Tlingit First Nation
- Tsartlip First Nation
- Tsawwassen First Nation
- Tsleil-Waututh First Nation
- T’Sou-ke Nation
- Wabigoon Lake Ojibway First Nation
- Williams Lake First Nation
Non-profits — 7
- World Wildlife Fund Canada
- Mother Tree Network
- Marine Matters
- Peninsula Streams Society
- Seachange Marine Conservation Society
- A Rocha
- Emergency Planning Secretariat
International — 8
- Association of Saamaka Traditional Authorities (Suriname)
- Jaringan Kerja Pemetaan Partisipatif (Indonesia)
- Cambodia Indigenous Peoples Alliance
- Colandef (Ghana)
- The Julian Cho Society (Belize)
- The Tenure Facility
- United Nations Development Programme
- Cadasta Foundation
Education — 3
- First Nations Technology Council
- University of Alberta
- University of Victoria
Government — 3
- Fisheries and Oceans Canada
- Natural Resources Canada
- Geological Survey of Canada
Private — 2
- Armstrong Environmental Services
- CEP Forensic
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