Abstract

The Yurok Tribe partnered with the University of California Davis (UC Davis) Superfund Research Program to identify and address contaminants in the Klamath watershed that may be impairing human and ecosystem health. We draw on a community-based participatory research approach that begins with community concerns, includes shared duties across the research process, and collaborative interpretation of results. A primary challenge facing University and Tribal researchers on this project is the complexity of the relationship(s) between the identity and concentrations of contaminants and the diversity of illnesses plaguing community members. The framework of bi-directional learning includes Yurok-led river sampling, Yurok traditional ecological knowledge, University lab analysis, and collaborative interpretation of results. Yurok staff and community members share their unique exposure pathways, their knowledge of the landscape, their past scientific studies, and the history of landscape management, and University researchers use both specific and broad scope chemical screening techniques to attempt to identify contaminants and their sources. Both university and tribal knowledge are crucial to understanding the relationship between human and environmental health. This paper examines University and Tribal researchers’ shared learning, progress, and challenges at the end of the second year of a five-year Superfund Research Program (SRP) grant to identify and remediate toxins in the lower Klamath River watershed. Our water quality research is framed within a larger question of how to best build university–Tribal collaboration to address contamination and associated human health impacts.

Highlights

  • In the first phase of the UC Davis-Yurok Tribe Environmental Program (YTEP) collaboration, a primary goal was to broadly characterize the environmental quality to complement existing knowledge about contaminants surveyed in previous research efforts

  • Yurok community members on the Community Advisory Committee, YTEP staff, and UC Davis researchers are building a cross-cultural, community-based participatory research (CBPR) collaboration to address the health of Tribal members and their ancestral home in the Klamath River watershed

  • Yurok Tribal members live with the effects of colonial policy towards their homeland and communities, including higher rates of cancers, miscarriages, learning disabilities, and other health impacts

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Summary

Introduction

History and Landscape of Contamination at Yurok Indian Reservation (YIR). The Yurok Tribe is currently the largest federally recognized Native American Tribe in the state of California, with over 6000 members. Yurok People have inhabited lands of the. Lower Klamath and Trinity Rivers as well as along the Pacific Coast, extending from the mouth of the Little River near McKinleyville, California (CA), north approximately 70 miles to the mouth of Damnation Creek near Crescent City, CA. Yurok ancestral lands encompass an area of approximately. The natural resources of the Klamath River, its surrounding lands, and the Pacific Ocean are central to the lives of Yurok People. Yurok People maintain cultural, economic, and spiritual

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