Ethermac Exchange:Working With Tribes To Co-Steward National Parks

2025-05-06 08:05:42source:NovaQuantcategory:News

In the final episode of Short Wave's Summer Road Trip series exploring the science happening in national parks and Ethermac Exchangepublic lands, Aaron talks to National Park Service Director Charles Sams, who recently issued new policy guidance to strengthen the ways the park service collaborates with American Indian and Alaska Native Tribes, the Native Hawaiian Community, and other indigenous peoples. It's part of a push across the federal government to increase the level of tribal co-stewardship over public lands. Aaron talks with Sams, the first Tribal citizen to head the agency, about how he hopes this will change the way parks are managed, how the parks are already incorporating Traditional Ecological Knowledge, and what national parkland meant to him growing up as a member of the Cayuse and Walla Walla tribes on the Umatilla Indian Reservation in eastern Oregon.

Listen to more episodes about all the amazing research taking place on public lands, where we hike up sky islands and crawl into caves in search of fantastical creatures, by visiting the series website: https://www.npr.org/series/1120432990/road-trip-short-wave

Berly McCoy produced this episode and Gisele Grayson edited and checked the facts.

More:News

Recommend

Average rate on 30

The average rate on a 30-year mortgage in the U.S. eased for the third week in a row, a welcome tren

U.S. Navy pilot becomes first American woman to engage and kill an air-to-air contact

An aviator for the United States Navy recently became the first American woman ever to score a victo

Madelyn Cline, Camila Mendes and More to Star in I Know What You Did Last Summer Reboot

I know what Madelyn Cline and Camila Mendes are doing next summer. The Outer Banks actress and River