Humans have an outsized impact on the planet: we\u2019ve wreaked havoc on countless ecosystems and one study estimates only 3% of land on Earth remains untouched by our influence. CrowdScience listener Teri has witnessed the harmful effects of development on natural habitats near her home, and wonders whether we can ever function as part of a healthy ecosystem.
We look for answers in Teri\u2019s home state, California. Humans have lived here for over 10,000 years and its first inhabitants formed a connection to their landscape unlike the exploitative approach of many later settlers. Today, the beliefs and traditions of the Karuk Tribe of northern California still emphasise a symbiotic relationship with nature, seeing plants and animals as their relations.
Over the past couple of centuries much of the Karuk\u2019s land has been degraded by mining, the timber industry and the outlawing of traditional burning practices. Tribal members show us how they\u2019re working to try to restore ecological balance.
As for the rest of humanity: can we rein in our destructive relationship to nature; or even have a beneficial effect on our local ecosystems?
Contributors:
Kathy McCovey - Karuk Tribe member and cultural practitioner \nDr Steward Pickett - Ecologist, Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies \nBill Tripp - Karuk Tribe member and Director of Natural Resources and Environmental Policy, Karuk Tribe Department of Natural Resources \nDr Frank Kanawha Lake - US Forest Service Research Ecologist and Tribal Liaison \nWill Harling - Co-lead, Western Klamath Restoration Partnership
Presenter: Caroline Steel \nProducer: Cathy Edwards \nEditor: Richard Collings \nProduction Co-ordinator: Jonathan Harris \nStudio Manager: Giles Aspen & Steve Greenwood
(Image: Huckleberries and tanoak acorns gathered near a burn site. Credit: Stormy Staats)