Zürcher Nachrichten - Nature guardians: Why Indigenous people are vital for saving biodiversity

EUR -
AED 4.30913
AFN 73.921508
ALL 95.357412
AMD 431.927342
ANG 2.099527
AOA 1077.136064
ARS 1625.056464
AUD 1.622062
AWG 2.114965
AZN 1.993025
BAM 1.954894
BBD 2.363665
BDT 144.253116
BGN 1.955192
BHD 0.442906
BIF 3493.414228
BMD 1.173351
BND 1.493965
BOB 8.109516
BRL 5.762395
BSD 1.173606
BTN 112.17216
BWP 15.84106
BYN 3.281191
BYR 22997.678936
BZD 2.360266
CAD 1.606564
CDF 2610.705375
CHF 0.915942
CLF 0.027233
CLP 1071.809429
CNY 7.969515
CNH 7.970337
COP 4445.075866
CRC 535.565374
CUC 1.173351
CUP 31.093801
CVE 110.22094
CZK 24.34175
DJF 208.978449
DKK 7.471412
DOP 69.259658
DZD 155.337482
EGP 62.072262
ERN 17.600264
ETB 183.250609
FJD 2.564183
FKP 0.859569
GBP 0.867018
GEL 3.133076
GGP 0.859569
GHS 13.249309
GIP 0.859569
GMD 86.218803
GNF 10297.576492
GTQ 8.954421
GYD 245.524531
HKD 9.185707
HNL 31.207791
HRK 7.533378
HTG 153.32479
HUF 357.684896
IDR 20574.885194
ILS 3.419086
IMP 0.859569
INR 112.108987
IQD 1537.280676
IRR 1539436.467695
ISK 143.606683
JEP 0.859569
JMD 185.437181
JOD 0.831913
JPY 185.012222
KES 151.5613
KGS 102.609324
KHR 4707.997658
KMF 492.807877
KPW 1056.037278
KRW 1758.002437
KWD 0.361522
KYD 0.977942
KZT 544.315304
LAK 25726.291048
LBP 105093.255315
LKR 379.057477
LRD 214.765913
LSL 19.398171
LTL 3.4646
LVL 0.709749
LYD 7.424747
MAD 10.710499
MDL 20.085372
MGA 4903.851669
MKD 61.624305
MMK 2462.809405
MNT 4201.594147
MOP 9.462912
MRU 46.813491
MUR 54.847092
MVR 18.066732
MWK 2035.108438
MXN 20.214722
MYR 4.610687
MZN 74.989513
NAD 19.397923
NGN 1607.606487
NIO 43.19163
NOK 10.775193
NPR 179.468377
NZD 1.973456
OMR 0.451146
PAB 1.173556
PEN 4.022035
PGK 5.110955
PHP 72.180442
PKR 326.927462
PLN 4.252575
PYG 7163.861581
QAR 4.27799
RON 5.200992
RSD 117.381865
RUB 86.623758
RWF 1716.44804
SAR 4.405548
SBD 9.420845
SCR 17.18952
SDG 704.598735
SEK 10.906432
SGD 1.493154
SHP 0.876025
SLE 28.89383
SLL 24604.574616
SOS 670.700456
SRD 43.712603
STD 24285.996013
STN 24.48948
SVC 10.268195
SYP 129.689805
SZL 19.391835
THB 37.98078
TJS 10.972886
TMT 4.106728
TND 3.413136
TOP 2.825148
TRY 53.286092
TTD 7.964273
TWD 37.047268
TZS 3050.8884
UAH 51.579903
UGX 4411.105131
USD 1.173351
UYU 46.666772
UZS 14236.399176
VES 591.701602
VND 30917.211282
VUV 138.834934
WST 3.178954
XAF 655.669757
XAG 0.013623
XAU 0.00025
XCD 3.17104
XCG 2.11501
XDR 0.815443
XOF 655.669757
XPF 119.331742
YER 280.020411
ZAR 19.37883
ZMK 10561.556925
ZMW 22.092322
ZWL 377.818532
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    61

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    23.11

    -0.04%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3900

    16.2

    -2.41%

  • BTI

    3.2000

    63.64

    +5.03%

  • AZN

    2.6800

    184.54

    +1.45%

  • RIO

    1.6000

    109.5

    +1.46%

  • BCE

    0.1900

    24.47

    +0.78%

  • RELX

    -0.5000

    32.77

    -1.53%

  • GSK

    1.0900

    50.9

    +2.14%

  • NGG

    0.0800

    87.24

    +0.09%

  • VOD

    -1.2250

    15.095

    -8.12%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    23.6

    -0.04%

  • BCC

    -1.2700

    67.93

    -1.87%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    13.14

    +0.08%

  • BP

    0.1800

    44.4

    +0.41%

Nature guardians: Why Indigenous people are vital for saving biodiversity

Nature guardians: Why Indigenous people are vital for saving biodiversity

For countless generations prior to European colonization, Canada's Indigenous people relied on caribou both as a source of subsistence and as an integral part of their cultural practices.

Text size:

Hunting and butchering the animal in frigid temperatures was long seen as a rite of passage, and members of the First Nations were the first to detect their serious decline.

"Fundamentally we are people of caribou," Valerie Courtois, director of Canada's Indigenous Leadership Initiative and a member of the Innu nation, told AFP.

"Caribou is what has really enabled us to survive, and to be who we are."

Today the species, which is known as reindeer outside North America, is endangered across much of Canada as a result of widespread habitat destruction from logging, roadbuilding, construction of transmission lines and more.

But an innovative pilot program led by Indigenous people might show a path to wider recovery.

As delegates from across the world meet in COP15 in Montreal this week to hammer out a new deal for nature, the case highlights the value of Indigenous stewardship in protecting ecosystems that benefit all humanity.

As detailed in a March 2022 paper in "Ecological Applications," the Klinse-Za subpopulation of caribou in British Columbia were once so plentiful they were described as "bugs on the landscape" but by 2013 had dwindled to just 38 animals.

That year, the First Nations of West Moberly and Saulteau devised a plan that saw them first cull wolves to reduce caribou predation, then added a maternal pen-fenced enclosures for females to birth and raise calves.

Their efforts saw the number of caribou of the herd triple in the area from 38 to 114.

With the threat of localized extinction averted, the two nations signed an agreement in 2020 with the governments of British Columbia and Canada to secure 7,900 square kilometers (3,050 square miles) of land for caribou, hoping to eventually revive their traditional hunt.

"When you protect caribou, a lot of animals come along for the ride," Ronnie Drever, a conservation scientist with nonprofit Nature United, told AFP.

"Good caribou conservation is also climate action," he added, because the old-growth forests and peatlands they live on are invaluable carbon sinks.

- Science catching up -

Globally, Indigenous people own or use a quarter of the world's land, but safeguard 80 percent of remaining biodiversity -- testament to centuries of sustainable practices that modern science is only just starting to understand.

A paper published this October in Current Biology looked at tropical forests across Asia, Africa, and the Americas, finding those located on protected Indigenous lands were the "healthiest, highest functioning, most diverse, and most ecologically resilient."

A 2019 paper in Environmental Science & Policy analyzed more than 15,000 areas in Canada, Brazil and Australia.

It found that the total number of birds, mammals, amphibians and reptiles were highest on lands managed or co-managed by Indigenous communities.

Protected areas like parks and wildlife reserves had the second highest levels of biodiversity, followed by areas that were not protected.

"This suggests that it's the land-management practices of many Indigenous communities that are keeping species numbers high," said lead author Richard Schuster, in a statement.

- Partnership crucial -

Jennifer Tauli Corpuz, of the Kankana-ey Igorot people of the Philippines, who is a lawyer and biodiversity expert with the International Indigenous Forum on Biodiversity, stressed that collaborative efforts were crucial.

"Conservation does not have a good history with Indigenous peoples, it's resulted in displacement," she told AFP.

National parks established on Euro-American notions that the land was once pristine "wilderness" typically prohibited Indigenous peoples from exercising their customary land uses, and forcibly displaced many from their ancestral homes.

Instead, she says, the rights of Indigenous groups need to be woven into the fabric of the new global biodiversity deal -- including a cornerstone pledge to protect 30 percent of land and water by 2030.

Indigenous groups say they should have greater autonomy to take the lead as managers of protected areas, arguing their successful record demonstrates they can pursue economic activity sustainably.

"The current biodiversity crisis is often depicted as a struggle to preserve untouched habitats," said a study published last year in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, which found that areas untouched by people were almost as rare 12,000 years ago as they are today.

"Current biodiversity losses are caused not by human conversion or degradation of untouched ecosystems, but rather by the appropriation, colonization, and intensification of use in lands inhabited and used by prior societies," it concluded.

M.Hug--NZN