Bi-Directional Learning: Identifying Contaminants on the Yurok Indian Reservation
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. History and Landscape of Contamination at Yurok Indian Reservation (YIR)
1.2. Yurok Tribe Environmental Program (YTEP) Work to Analyze, Remediate, Protect Community
1.3. Symptoms of Contamination (Human Health and Fisheries)
1.4. Unique Exposure Pathways
2. Materials and Methods: Working to Respond to Community Concerns
3. Results
4. Discussion
4.1. The Role of Bi-Directional Learning in Evaluating Contamination in Indigenous Communities
4.2. Participation and Knowledge Exchange
4.3. Outreach and Dissemination of Information
4.4. Communication of Realistic Project Outcomes
4.5. Responding to Community Concerns
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Toxins | Symptoms |
---|---|
(N-Methyl) Carbamates |
|
Dioxins/Furans |
|
Mercury |
|
Microcystins |
|
Organochlorine Pesticides (1st group) |
|
Organophosphate Pesticides (2nd group) |
|
Phenols including pentachlorophenol (PCP) and trichlorophenol (TCP) |
|
CK Mouth River Mile | Elevation | Watershed | Watershed Acres | Site Name | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
43.5 | 60 | Klamath | na | Weitchpec | Klamath River, mainstem at Weitchpec; used as baseline for water quality of the Klamath River entering the Reservation. River bank and river bar used for basketry materials; public boat ramp. |
37.4 | 66 | Tully | 11,201 | Tully Creek | Important cultural site for community/youth Culture Camps; Tan Oak gathering; willow harvesting; men’s sweats; and fish refugia. Has private domestic and drinking water intakes and 1 community system well/storage cistern under the direct influence of surface waters. Large watershed that is primarily managed for timber harvest including repeat herbicide application. |
37.4 | 66 | Tully | 11,201 | Homchow at Tully | Duplicate—Tully Creek. |
35.9 | 109 | Miners | 2993 | Miners Creek | Has multiple private domestic and drinking water intakes from surface water as well as springs in watershed. Upper reaches are extensively utilized for Cannabis growing operations. One of a series of critical fish rearing/refugia for Chinook and endangered Coho salmon. |
34.5 | 360 | Mahwah | 1665 | Mawah Creek | Has multiple private domestic and drinking water intakes from surface water as well as springs in watershed. Upper reaches are extensively utilized for Cannabis growing operations. One of a series of critical fish rearing/refugia for Chinook and endangered Coho salmon. |
32.2 | 43 | Kep’el | 5396 | Kep’el Creek | Traditional Salmon Dance/ceremony when fish dam was repaired, not currently practiced; take old hatchery road to community swimming hole/picnic area; important fish rearing area/cold water refugia and some spawning for first mile of creek. Main public water system uses this surface water; and scattered private systems from surface water and springs. |
25.6 | 35 | Sregon | 38 | Sregon | Ceremonial Dance grounds for one weekend each year for Brush Dance—primary participants (Medicine Boy, Medicine Girl, Medicine woman) fast and sweat 4–10 days; 200–300 participants camping, drinking water. |
25.6 | 45 | Sregon | 38 | Sregon Raak | Creek at Highway 169, Post Mile 15.6. Source is spring utilized for ceremonies and public traditional drinking source; along river, there are several important fish camp areas—5 fishing holes. |
24.5 | 26 | Pecwan | 17,652 | Pecwan Creek | Cultural significant site; location every two years for the Jump Dance, the ceremonial renewal dance. It is a ten-day event and a hand full of men who are separated from the rest of the people fast, sweat, and bathe in creek water. Also involved are Karuk, Hupa people; they come to help balance the world and these folks drink, swim, and bathe in this creek; there are hundreds of people during these ten days. Multiple small community and private source water of surface waters and springs. Fish rearing and cold water refugia for Chinook and endangered Coho salmon. Watershed managed primarily for timber with some active logging. |
17.0 | 32 | Ah Pah | 10,307 | Ah Pah Creek Mouth | Has multiple private domestic and drinking water intakes from springs in watershed. One of a series of critical fish rearing/refugia for Chinook and endangered Coho salmon. Traditional village site sits above the mouth of Ah Pah Creek; currently used as a ‘living-village’ for cultural workshops and working toward revitalizing cultural ceremonies/Jump Dance. Watershed predominantly private property of Green Diamond Resource Company and intensively managed for commercial timber with repeat pesticide applications, including 2016 and 2017. |
17.0 | 37 | Ah Pah | 10,307 | GD WQ station | Ah Pah Creek at the Green Diamond Resource Company’s water quality station on South Fork. |
17.0 | 37 | Ah Pah | 10,307 | Homchow at AhPah 2 | Duplicate—Ah Pah. |
16.1 | 11 | Blue | 80,167 | Blue Creek | This is the largest tributary watershed in the Lower Klamath River Basin and extremely import to the Yurok Tribe as it is a major fish-bearing stream (chinook, coho, steelhead, cutthroat, sculpin, speckled dace, three spine stickleback, Klamath small-scale sucker, and lamprey eel) with a distinct genetic chinook salmon population. Recently acquired from the Green Diamond, who in the past managed it for commercial timber. Under Yurok ownership, it will be managed in traditional ways and as a salmon sanctuary into perpetuity. In addition, it contains much of the Yurok sacred “High Country”. |
5.5 | 13 | Turwar | 20,345 | Turwar Creek | Has a private public water system, multiple private domestic and drinking water intakes from springs and private wells in watershed; approx 50 homes. Important fish rearing/refugia and site of one of the first fish habitat restoration projects by Yurok. Site of historic Arrow Mills lumber mills. Lower drainage significantly altered by the construction of the Klamath River levee system in late 1960–1970s. Lower watershed mostly rural residential property but upper reaches of watershed managed for commercial timber production. |
1.3 | 2 | Mynot | 14,996 | Hunter-Mynot-Spruce | Has private public water system, multiple private domestic and drinking water intakes from springs and private wells in watershed. One of a series of critical rearing and juvenile over-wintering areas for the endangered Coho salmon. |
0.2 | 6 | Klamath | na | Wehl-kwew | Klamath mainstem in South Slough wetlands of estuary at Wehl-kwew. Ceremonial Dance Grounds at mouth of river within National Redwoods Park with lots of tourist visitors as well as Tribal member use. Fish move through slough and shelter and overwinter within the channel. It is brackish water. |
Detected | Detected < LOQ | Never Detected | |
---|---|---|---|
Chlorpyrifos | Chlorothalonil | Bioallethrin | Novaluron |
Fipronil | Prallethrin | Fipronil-desulfinyl | |
Fipronil-sulfide | Tetramethrin | Fipronil-desulfinyl amide | |
Fipronil sulfone | Bifenthrin | Fipronil amide | |
Phenothrin | Deltamethrin | ||
Cyhalothrin | Esfenvalerate | ||
Cyfluthrin | Cypermethrin | ||
Cyphenothrin | Permethrin |
Compounds | ||
---|---|---|
Triclocarban | Triclosan | Clomazone |
Imidacloprid | Methomyl | Chlorantraniprole |
Simazine | Thiamethoxam | Azoxystrobin |
Diuron | Dimethoate | Metolachlor |
Propanil | Thiacloprid | Difenoconazole |
2-phenylphenol | Hexazinone | Thiobencarb |
Boscalid | Propoxur | Pyriproxyfen |
Methoxyfenozide | Cyprodinil | Pendimethalin |
2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid (2,4-D) | 2-Methyl-4-Chlorophenoxyacetic Acid (MCPA) | Diethyltoluamide (DEET) |
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Share and Cite
Middleton, B.R.; Talaugon, S.; Young, T.M.; Wong, L.; Fluharty, S.; Reed, K.; Cosby, C.; Myers, R., II. Bi-Directional Learning: Identifying Contaminants on the Yurok Indian Reservation. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2019, 16, 3513. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16193513
Middleton BR, Talaugon S, Young TM, Wong L, Fluharty S, Reed K, Cosby C, Myers R II. Bi-Directional Learning: Identifying Contaminants on the Yurok Indian Reservation. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2019; 16(19):3513. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16193513
Chicago/Turabian StyleMiddleton, Beth Rose, Sabine Talaugon, Thomas M. Young, Luann Wong, Suzanne Fluharty, Kaitlin Reed, Christine Cosby, and Richard Myers, II. 2019. "Bi-Directional Learning: Identifying Contaminants on the Yurok Indian Reservation" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 16, no. 19: 3513. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16193513
APA StyleMiddleton, B. R., Talaugon, S., Young, T. M., Wong, L., Fluharty, S., Reed, K., Cosby, C., & Myers, R., II. (2019). Bi-Directional Learning: Identifying Contaminants on the Yurok Indian Reservation. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 16(19), 3513. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph16193513