The black oak tribal stewardship project aims to restore reciprocal caretaking relationships among tribally affiliated people with Yosemite and the oak groves. Currently working on a multi-year effort in gathering acorns, planting oak saplings and building burn piles to reduce heavy fuels in the groves and implement a prescribed landscape/cultural fire to kill off filbert weevil pests that larvae in the duff layers. As of 2023, nearly 1000 young black oak saplings with close to 100 different tribal participants including youth and elders.
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California’s Indigenous communities know how to fight fires with fire. Will state and federal firefighters learn from this knowledge? Today California has out-of-control wildfires, but for centuries Indigenous tribes tended the land with fire. One North Fork Mono leader is on a journey to bring back and legalize controlled burns for cultural purposes. This is the third episode of “In Their Element: Earth, Air, Fire, Water” a four-part docuseries that spotlights Indigenous leaders who work to protect these elements that sustain life. Learn more here: https://to.pbs.org/3N8YR4T
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The critically endangered California condor has been absent from Northern California redwood forests for over a century -- until May 3rd, 2022, when the Yurok Tribe and Redwood National and State Parks reintroduced two birds to the woodland area, the culmination of a 15-year reintroduction project. There are only around 200 adult California condors left in the wild, according to the International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN). Of these, only 93 have produced offspring. For more information visit: https://www.yuroktribe.org/
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Two marine conservationist groups: Happywhale, the largest crowdsourced database for identifying marine mammals, and Oceans Initiative, a Seattle-based nonprofit on a mission to protect marine life.
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