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SUMMARY:Co-managing wildfire risk across boundaries (CoMFRT)
DESCRIPTION:Webinar recording. \nWildfire risk is shared across landscapes\, ownerships\, and administrative boundaries. Consequently\, successful efforts to mitigate this risk depend on coordination of individual and collective actions across sets of public and private institutions and individuals associated with managing components of fire-prone landscapes. We need to understand how these diverse sets of actors\, including individual residents\, communities\, non-profit organizations\, and local\, state\, tribal\, and federal agencies can and do interact and make decisions that affect fire and risk based on their rules\, processes and social norms. Initiated in 2017\, the Co-Management of Wildfire Risk Transmission Partnership (CoMFRT) brings together wildfire researchers\, practitioners and decisionmakers to co-produce knowledge and actionable recommendations to support people and institutions successfully working together across scales and circumstances to best mitigate fire risk and build adaptation to wildfire. This presentation will provide an overview of the CoMFRT Partnership\, key results and recommendations to date\, and next steps all designed to underscore approaches for a variety of actors responsible for managing wildfire risk to better live with fire.
URL:https://greatbasinfirescience.org/event/13681/
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UID:13872-1611738000-1611741600@greatbasinfirescience.org
SUMMARY:Seeds of Success: Fort Belknap Indian community BLM-SER restoration program
DESCRIPTION:View webinar recording. \nThe Fort Belknap Indian Community (FBIC) Native Seed & Grassland Restoration Program was designed to meet DOI\, BLM\, and Plant Conservation and Restoration Program Strategic Goals\, via partnerships with FBIC and the Society for Ecological Restoration (SER). Launched in 2019\, and led by an Indigenous PI\, this Traditional Ecological Knowledge (TEK)-based program focuses on developing genetically appropriate native plant material for habitat restoration; inventorying and prioritizing plant populations; and implementing and assessing restoration efforts through monitoring. Working on BLM lands\, in consultation with Aaniiih and Nakoda elders and employing and empowering tribal youth\, we are using Assessment\, Inventorying\, and Monitoring (AIM) protocols to identify plant populations\, and then making collections from them for the Seeds of Success (SOS) program. Our long-term goal is to empower FBIC in creating a community-led greenhouse program to grow out native seeds\, focusing on culturally significant species\, thereby benefitting the community financially in increasing BLM Stock and Foundation seed amounts to use on larger programs and for restoration of FBIC and other Native American lands. FBIC has invited us to expand seed collection onto FBIC land\, to help the community advance restoration efforts of degraded rangelands to support Greater sage-grouse and bison conservation.
URL:https://greatbasinfirescience.org/event/seeds-of-success-fort-belknap-indian-community-blm-ser-restoration-program/
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