News

Burn to preserve, and other forest practices, from Ecuador to California

1. United States

Indigenous women are learning about controlled burns, based on traditional Native practices and current natural resource management. To close the gender gap in wildfire management, the first Prescribed Fire Training Exchange (TREX) targeting women was held in 2016. The Karuk Tribe hosted a session in the Klamath Mountains last October for 50 Indigenous women from the United States, Canada, and Australia.

Before its land was appropriated in the mid-19th century, the Karuk Tribe inhabited more than a million acres that spanned today’s Northern California into Oregon. Karuk women were charged with managing fire on lands closest to home.

Why We Wrote This

In our progress roundup, cooperation in the Americas between Indigenous peoples and authorities is preserving forests, from policies against logging to use of controlled burns. And in Uganda, some endangered species are rebounding after decades of increased conservation.

The U.S. recently returned 1,031 acres to the Karuk Tribe, and a co-stewardship agreement with the Forest Service gives Karuk residents more space – and authority – to manage land through controlled burns. The threat of unmanaged forests is not hypothetical: In 2020, the Slater Fire killed two people and destroyed 150 Karuk homes.

JOE RONDONE/THE REPUBLIC/REUTERS

A Prescribed Fire Training Exchange program for Indigenous women takes place on Karuk tribe ancestral territory in the Pacific Northwest, October 2022.

Indigenous trainees also learned about Native cultural burns to care for food resources and other plants. “Getting that fire on the ground is like starting to heal a scar,” said participant Annelia Hillman. “It helps our wounds heal through the first stage of fire.”
Source: The Arizona Republic

2. Ecuador

A new nature preserve protects 3,057,671 acres of Andean and Amazonian forests. Ecosystems protected by the Tarímiat Pujutaí Nuṉka Reserve range from cloud forests and sandstone plateaus to Amazonian lowlands and floodplain forests. There are more than a thousand species of birds as well as jaguars and spectacled bears that call the area home.

Nearly 200,000 people, mostly Indigenous, live in the province where the reserve is located. They had long expressed concern about the creeping influx of mining, logging, and cattle ranching in the region. The provincial government worked closely with nearly 900 residents of four Indigenous communities to ensure Native residents’ sustainable, ancestral use of one of the Amazon’s largest protected areas.
Sources: Mongabay, Nature and Culture International

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