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Range Management in Indian Country

Range Management in Indian Country. Joe Hiller College of Agriculture and Life Sciences The University of Arizona for Rangelands West 3 rd Annual Meeting of the Western Rangelands Partnership Tucson, AZ 17-19 March 2003. Opportunities and Obstacles.

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Range Management in Indian Country

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  1. Range Management in Indian Country Joe Hiller College of Agriculture and Life Sciences The University of Arizona for Rangelands West 3rd Annual Meeting of the Western Rangelands Partnership Tucson, AZ 17-19 March 2003

  2. Opportunities and Obstacles • Opportunities: Much of Indian Country in western US is rangeland • Large tracts of land suitable for landscape-scale management? NOT • Obstacles: Land ownership issues may make management inordinately difficult • At the “ground level”, cultural issues typically override/trump western scientific management • Many tribes have grazing ordinances, some do not

  3. Indian Land Base • Pre-European: ??? • 1881: 155,632,312 acres • 1887: 138 + million acres • 1900: 77,865,373 acres • 1934: 48 + million acres • 2004: 55.7 million acres • Held in trust by the US for American Indians, Indian tribes, and Alaska Natives

  4. Land Ownership in Indian Country • Tribal • Tribal original: in trust since establishment of reservation • Tribal purchase: transferred to tribe from allottee or heir • Allotted • Undivided interest heirship (fractionated): passed to heirs in shares • Single ownership: passed via will or sole survivor

  5. Land Management in Indian Country • Tribal original: managed by BIA or under contract to tribe per P.L. 93-638 • Tribal purchase: managed by tribe • Undivided interest/fractionated: managed by heirs per tribal law and ordinance (grazing, leasing, etc.) • Single ownership: managed by individuals

  6. Land Ownership in Arizona Million acres % of total • Federal: 32.2 44.0 • Indian/Trust: 22.0 30.0 • Private: 10.1 14.0 • State/Trust: 8.7 11.0 • Total: 73.0 100.0

  7. Range and Land Management • The need for professional range and land management is no less in Indian Country than elsewhere • Resource issues are the same—drought grazing strategies, invasive species, riparian zones, etc. • May be more urgent because of difficulties associated with ownership issues • Tribes in the west need your help…

  8. Additional information • http://cals.arizona.edu/extension/nativeamerican/ • http://www.nwi.org/ • http://www.indianlandtenure.org/

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