One People One Reef Storytelling Project
The Storytellers One People One Reef Story
About Background Our Approach The Team Contact & Donate
Foreword Filtey Yolfad Halad and Halalwech Buuch and Repiy Loaroab Mwaey Forbwaey Afterword Storytelling booklet
1. Value of Traditional Stories 2. Management and Respect 3. Impact of Spearfishing 4. Closing Areas to Fishing 5. New Kinds of Fishing 6. Coral 7. Plastic Pollution 8. Trash 9. Turtles 10. Invasive Species 11. Reefs are Connected
Gallery Index The Yap Outer Islands One People One Reef Storytelling Project Illustrations Join
The Storytellers Ulithian Stories Foreword Filtey Yolfad Halad and Halalwech Buuch and Repiy Loaroab Mwaey Forbwaey Afterword Storytelling booklet One People One Reef Story Science Commentary 1. Value of Traditional Stories 2. Management and Respect 3. Impact of Spearfishing 4. Closing Areas to Fishing 5. New Kinds of Fishing 6. Coral 7. Plastic Pollution 8. Trash 9. Turtles 10. Invasive Species 11. Reefs are Connected
One People One Reef Storytelling Project
AboutBackgroundOur Approach Gallery Gallery Index The Yap Outer Islands One People One Reef Storytelling Project Illustrations Join The TeamContact & Donate
 

Gallery Index

Photographs by Katie Sugarman and Scott Davis

 
waleai13.jpg
Yap Outer Islands
John Rulmal (Junior Magul) cracks a laugh as he listens to his aunts story - part of it he has never heard before. He initiated this storytelling project to reconnect local youth with their culture and traditions.jpg
Storytelling Project
elato25.One People One Reef combines scientific and traditional approaches to coral reef management. Here, Peter Nelson leads a fisheries workshop on Elato. Local scientists on Ulithi Atoll have compiled a database of some 80,000 fish .jpg
One People One Reef
Storytelling_illustration_Charlotte_turtle2.jpg
Illustrations
Contact UsDonate