Environment

Sawyer Filters are Changing Lives by Improving Access to Clean Water

These Washington Environmentalists Are Trying to Save the Elusive Wolverine

The Everglades Need More Fresh Water. Here’s What’s Being Done to Help.

Wildfires and Beetles Are Plaguing Our Forests. But We’re Not Powerless.

All Jokes Aside, New Comedy Video Series Tackles Important Environmental Issues

Landscape Architecture Is All About Finding Balance with Nature

This Farmer Has Been Working to Revive California’s San Joaquin River for over 65 Years

A New Film Encourages Viewers to Voice Support for Tongass National Forest

A Mesmerizing Drone Film of Water and Land Intertwined

A Solitary Whale in Search of Connection

Ultrarunning Through Wyoming’s Longest Migration Corridors

The Future of Oregon’s Wild and Scenic River System

This Boy Wants to Save the World from Plastic

Preserving Washington’s Shrub-Steppe

Light Painting Under the Night Sky

Mother Earth Confronts the Human Race

The Klamath River Is the Lifeblood of the Yurok Tribe

Using SUPs to Deliver a Plastic-Free Future

It’s Time for Mountain Bikers to Step Up

How Fire Suppression Made California Fires Worse
The Klamath River Is the Lifeblood of the Yurok Tribe
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Guardians of the River, produced by American Rivers and Swiftwater Films, focuses on the hard-won efforts of leaders of the Yuroks. Frankie Joe Myers, vice chair of the tribe; Sammy Gensaw, director of the Ancestral Guard; Barry McCovey, fisheries biologist with the tribe; and members of the Ancestral Guard and Klamath Justice Coalition share why removing four dams across southern Oregon and Northern California is vital to restoring clean water, food sovereignty, and justice for the Klamath River. After decades of advocacy, state officials have signed an agreement for the dams’ removal; scheduled for 2023, it will be the largest such removal project in U.S. history.