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Fort Belknap Indian Community

Plant trees to shade water and reduce water temperatures.

Water
Fort Belknap Indian Community

Plant trees in areas upstream of infrastructure to help reduce the damage from flooding.

Building Infrastructure People Water
Fort Belknap Indian Community

The Little Rockies Restoration Project, in which FBIC has partnered with the Center for Large Landscape Conservation to restore up...

Fort Belknap Indian Community

Consider planting more climate tolerant tree species in the forest if the current tree species are dying out.

Fort Belknap Indian Community

Retain forestry cover and support the diversity of existing species and ecosystems: Maintain age stand diversity, Prevent excessive fuel build-up...

Fort Belknap Indian Community

Plant more trees to provide shade and reduce heat levels in the communities. Trees should also be planted to add...

Building People
Fort Belknap Indian Community

The Fire Management Department has thinned 5,000 acres in the wildland urban interface, in the Hays and Lodge Pole area,...

Building People
Fort Belknap Indian Community

The Department has also completed prescribed burns. Thinning protects forests in a warming, drying climate because overcrowding reduces tree health...

Fort Belknap Indian Community

The Fire Management Department is careful when thinning to leave dead standing trees ("habitat trees") wherever there is any evidence...

Fort Belknap Indian Community

Plant trees.

Fort Belknap Indian Community

Treat forested areas of the reservation to increase resilience to drought and fire. Continue thinning the Little Rockies.

Keweenaw Bay Indian Community

Retain long-lived conifers such as hemlock, northern white cedar, and white pine where feasible.