Indigenous knowledge guides the conservation of culturally important plants

Since time immemorial, the Karuk tribe of northern California have managed their ancestral lands, over 400,000 hectares of open oak woodlands, meadows, and forested mountains along the middle section of the Klamath River. They used low-level fires to maintain a healthy landscape for the plants central to their culture. But after settlers arrived in California, … Continue reading Indigenous knowledge guides the conservation of culturally important plants