Even as the concept of terroir becomes more salient in diverse cultural and national contexts, climate-driven environmental change threatens to alter the ecologies that contribute to the distinctive terroir of place-based products. Yet few studies examine how producers of terroir products perceive and experience environmental change. Our comparative case study addresses this gap, as we examine ways that changing ecological conditions will influence the emergent terroir of Wisconsin artisanal cheese and New England oysters. Drawing on in-depth interviews and a survey, we describe the environmental and sociocultural elements that Wisconsin artisanal cheesemakers and New England oyster farmers identify as characteristic of the terroir and merroir (terroir's maritime adaptation) of their products. We then compare cheesemakers' and oyster farmers' perceptions and experiences of climate change. We find that both groups perceive climate-related threats to the terroir and merroir of their products, though each group experienced these threats differently. We argue that the ongoing constitution of terroirwhich has always reflected a tension between nature and culturewill be further complicated by changing ecologies. We suggest that a generative understanding of terroir that emphasizes terroir's sociocultural dimensions may help artisanal cheesemakers and oyster farmers mitigate some climate-related threats to their products.
1.Univ Calif Berkeley, Dept Environm Sci Policy & Management, Berkeley, CA 94720 USA 2.North Carolina State Univ, Dept Sociol & Anthropol, Campus Box 8107, Raleigh, NC 27695 USA 3.Campbell Univ, Dept Publ Hlth, Buies Creek, NC 27506 USA
Recommended Citation:
De Master, Kathryn Teigen,LaChance, James,Bowen, Sarah,et al. Terroir in Transition: Environmental Change in the Wisconsin Artisanal Cheese and New England Oyster Sectors[J]. SUSTAINABILITY,2019-01-01,11(10)