Keynote Speaker - Robin Wall Kimmerer

SCAC 2024 Keynote speaker - Robin Wall Kimmerer

Plant Ecologist, Educator & Writer, MacArthur Fellow.

Robin Wall Kimmerer is a mother, scientist, decorated professor, and enrolled member of the Citizen Potawatomi Nation. She is the author of Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge and the Teachings of Plants, which has earned Kimmerer wide acclaim. Her first book, Gathering Moss: A Natural and Cultural History of Mosses, was awarded the John Burroughs Medal for outstanding nature writing, and her other work has appeared in Orion, Whole Terrain, and numerous scientific journals. In 2022, Braiding Sweetgrass was adapted for young adults by Monique Gray Smith. This new edition reinforces how wider ecological understanding stems from listening to the earth’s oldest teachers: the plants around us.

Robin tours widely and has been featured on NPR’s On Being with Krista Tippett and in 2015 addressed the general assembly of the United Nations on the topic of “Healing Our Relationship with Nature.” Kimmerer is a SUNY Distinguished Teaching Professor of Environmental Biology, and the founder and director of the Center for Native Peoples and the Environment, whose mission is to create programs which draw on the wisdom of both indigenous and scientific knowledge for our shared goals of sustainability. In 2022 she was named a MacArthur Fellow.

As a writer and a scientist, her interests in restoration include not only restoration of ecological communities, but restoration of our relationships to land. She holds a BS in Botany from SUNY ESF, an MS and PhD in Botany from the University of Wisconsin and is the author of numerous scientific papers on plant ecology, bryophyte ecology, traditional knowledge and restoration ecology. As a writer and a scientist, her interests in restoration include not only restoration of ecological communities, but restoration of our relationships to land. She lives on an old farm in upstate New York, tending gardens both cultivated and wild.

Willemijn Appels

Willemijn Appels - SCAC24 speaker

Senior Research Chair at Lethbridge College, Leading the Mueller Irrigation Group

Willemijn Appels is Senior Research Chair at Lethbridge College, leading the Mueller Irrigation Group. Trained as a hydrologist and soil physicist at Wageningen University (the Netherlands), her expertise is in measuring and modeling water flow and solute transport above and below the soil surface. The Mueller Irrigation Group was established in 2016 and investigates how new scientific findings in the field of agricultural water management can be translated into practical applications for producers in the irrigated agriculture sector of southern Alberta. The group works on new sensor systems and management practices to achieve better water and nutrient use efficiency in collaboration with industry partners across the irrigation sector.

Melissa Arcand

Dr. Melissa Arcand

Associate Professor in the Department of Soil Science at the University of Saskatchewan and is a member of the Muskeg Lake Cree Nation in Treaty 6

She researches soil health, carbon storage, and nutrient cycling in agroecosystems. Her more recent interdisciplinary research focuses on Indigenous agriculture in the Prairies and included hosting a SSHRC Connections Grant-funded Forum on Indigenous Agriculture in Saskatchewan and collaborating with First Nations' lands departments to assess soils on agricultural lands through projects funded through the New Frontiers in Research Fund – Explorations Grant and the Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Agricultural Climate Solutions Living Labs. Her team is developing and delivering outreach activities in soil health and agricultural beneficial management practices to First Nations through a Weston Family Foundation Soil Health Initiative project. In addition to her research and service work, she teaches and is the academic advisor for students in the Kanawayihetaytan Askiy ("Let us take care of the land" in Plains Cree) Indigenous land and resource management certificate program and is the Academic Lead for the kihci-okâwîmâw askiy Knowledge Centre at the University of Saskatchewan.

Helen Baulch

Helen Baulch - SCAC24 speaker

Associate Professor at the School of Environment and Sustainability and Global Institute for Water Security, University of Saskatchewan

Helen’s work focusses on causes and consequences of excess nutrients in aquatic ecosystems. Her group works to help identify pragmatic options to manage agricultural nutrients, and support research on cold regions processes, including BMPs suited to the prairie context. Her work also spans to aquatic ecosystems impacted by high nutrients and changing climate, studying the cycling of nutrients within lakes, impacts of blooms within lakes, and adaptation and mitigation needs. She lives in Saskatoon, working as an associate professor and Centennial Enhancement Chair at the University of Saskatchewan School of Environment and Sustainability and Global Institute for Water Security. Helen has received multiple honors through her career for her teaching and research, including a recent appointment to the Royal Society of Canada College of New Scholars.

Ryan Canart

Ryan Canart - SCAC24 speaker

General Manager, Assiniboine West Watershed District

Ryan Canart grew up in sale barns, feed yards and pastures across Southern British Columbia. He attended and obtained a degree in Natural resource Management in 2002 from Thompson River University in Kamloops BC. Started a grass backgrounding operation in 2000 near Hargrave Manitoba where he implements silvo-pasture projects and management intensive grazing. In 2004, he took a job with what is now Assiniboine West Watershed District, the largest Watershed District in Manitoba. Ryans passions include trying to maximize ecological performance and outcomes on the Canadian prairies using trees, shrubs and livestock, exploring wild places and his spending time with his young family.

Jason Cardinal

Jason Cardinal

FDMG Manager, Flying Dust First Nation

Jason Cardinal, Manager of the Flying Dust Market Garden, is a dynamic professional with a multifaceted background in Data Science, he specializes in Automation and Digital Agriculture. Jason has been apart of the Flying Dust administration team for past 3 years and seamlessly blends his technical prowess with a robust foundation in business and mechanics, shaping him into a versatile leader. As a leader, he exemplifies technological innovation and traditional values, steering the Market Garden towards a prosperous and eco-friendly future.

Gabriel Dallago

Gabriel Dallago

Assistant Professor at the Department of Animal Science, University of Manitoba

A new Assistant Professor at the Department of Animal Science. Gabriel has a background in animal science with an emphasis on the use of precision technologies to improve the productivity, welfare and sustainability of livestock production systems. His research focuses on using information gathered from feeding, milking and environmental monitoring systems to guide changes in management practices and enhance efficiency in livestock production.

Christina Gish Hill

Christina Gish Hill- SCAC24 speaker

Associate Professor, Iowa State University (Dept of World Languages and Cultures)

Christina Gish Hill combines oral history, ethnography, and archival research to explore the mechanisms Indigenous people use to assert their sovereign relationship with their historical landscape despite the ruptures created by removal, reservations, assimilation, and development. In her research, kinship—networks that connect both human and non-human entities to the landscape—emerges as one important mechanism that Native people historically used to assert both cultural identity and political sovereignty in many spheres, including negotiation of political relationships with the United States, resistance to removal from homelands, establishment of reservation boundaries, maintenance of cultural landscapes, and preservation of food systems. Her most recent research on Indigenous food sovereignty explores the ways that Indigenous corn agriculture, seed development, and broader food systems have acted as important mechanisms that Native people have used to assert both cultural identity and political autonomy.

Jill Falcon Ramaker

Jill Falcon Ramaker- SCAC24 speaker

Assistant Professor, Community Nutrition & Sustainable Food Systems. Director, Buffalo Nations Food System Initiative, Montana State University

Jill Falcon Ramaker (Anishinaabe: Turtle Mountain Ojibwe) is Assistant Professor of Community Nutrition and Sustainable Food Systems. She directs the Buffalo Nations Food System Initiative at Montana State University, in Bozeman, MT, an education and research initiative in support of intertribal food sovereignty aligned with the Buffalo Treaty. The initiative serves the Buffalo Nations biocultural region of the Northern Plains and Rockies including three Canadian provinces and five US states. She notably studies food systems in Indigenous communities. Her research lies in the restoration of balance in human-natural systems, buffalo return, Indigenous land practices, heirloom seed propagation and stewardship, the buffalo culture seasonal round, cultural identity, Indigenous wellness, and biocultural diversity. She is a mother of three and a member of Minweyweywiigan Midewiwin Lodge, Roseau River First Nation, MB.

Stefan Signer

Stefan Signer - SCAC24 speaker

Dairy Farmer, Dairy Farmers of Manitoba, Dairy Farmers of Canada, Keystone Agricultural Producers

Dairy farmer operating Signer Dairy near Kleefeld Manitoba together with his wife Stephanie who is a schoolteacher, their four children ages 6 to 14, and Stefan’s retired parents who live nearby. Stefan graduated from the University of Manitoba with a BSc Ag in 2006 and returned home to join the family farm. For 10 years he was contracted by the local Robotic Milker sales and services company as a “Farm Management Support” advisor to assist farmers transitioning to robotic milking. Stefan is heavily involved in leadership in the Dairy and Ag industries. In 2019 Stefan was elected to the board of the Dairy Farmers, in 2021 Stefan joined the board of the Keystone Agricultural Producers, and in 2023 Stefan was elected to the board of the Dairy Farmers of Canada. In his limited free time, Stefan’s hobbies include travelling, scuba diving, and sailing.

Keshav Singh

Keshav Singh- SCAC24 speaker

Research Scientist at the Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC), Lethbridge Research and Development Centre, AB

Lead of Remote Sensing and Phenomics Lab (RSPLab) at AAFC Lethbridge (AB). He works on proximal and UAV-based advanced sensing systems (visible, infrared, LiDAR, multispectral and hyperspectral Imaging) in controlled and field environment to address digital phenomics and precision agriculture research applications. He specialized in novel technologies, augmented by machine and computer vision to support modern agriculture. Under various projects, he involved in spectral imaging techniques, agronomic data processing, image-cube analysis, machine/deep learning algorithms development, crops mapping and AI-driven big-data analytics to monitor plant growth and health. His research program integrates smart imaging systems (IoTs, drone/UAVs), automated ground robotics (mobile carts), satellites and AI based computational modeling to support high-throughput phenotyping in plant breeding and field agronomy programs. He mainly focuses on applying innovative sensing technologies and tools for precise measurements of physiological and agronomic traits of Canadian prairies crops such as cereals and pulses.

Specializes: Remote Sensing, Digital Imaging, Plant Phenomics, Precision Agriculture, Smart Farming

Sean Thompson

Sean Thompson- SCAC24 speaker

Director at Olds College Technology Access Centre for Livestock Production

Sean Thompson is the Director of the Technology Access Center for Livestock Production (TACLP). In his current role, Sean provides oversight to operations conducted by the TACLP with emphasis on technical advisory, project management and maintaining client relationships. Sean has a personal and professional background in beef cattle management, nutrition, and genetics. Further, he has extensive experience managing research projects at post-secondary institutions. Sean holds an MSc in beef cattle nutrition from the University of Manitoba. Prior to joining Olds College, Sean served as Feed Industry Liaison at the University of Saskatchewan, managing feed processing and livestock feeding research projects. He also has previous extension experience, providing information and guidance to beef producers as a Livestock Specialist with the Saskatchewan Ministry of Agriculture. Away from his day job, Sean operates a purebred Shorthorn operation on his farm north of Cochrane, AB.