Climate Changed: First Nation balances Western science with traditional knowledge
STAND OFF, Alta. — The Prairie Blood coulee winds through a property on the Kainai Nation, also known as the Blood Tribe, in southern Alberta.
On a warm fall day, about a dozen people haul willows, mulch, dirt and water to several spots along a dry creek bed. Some pound large posts into the ground.
Technicians from Blood Tribe and volunteers from local environmental groups are building five beaver dam analogs, which mimic a natural logjam. They hope to restore the stream flow to help the landowner care for his animals and have more water for wildlife as the area experiences a decade-long drought.
“Farther upstream, where there are beavers, there is plenty of water. They are missing here and we need to help this ecosystem,” Alvin First Rider, an environmental technician with Blood Tribe Land Management, said as the crew got started on another day’s work. “(Beavers) are ecological engineers like bison or fire. They are tools that people don’t need to be scared of. They get a bad rap, but we need to learn to live with them.