Though the modern idea of resources management and conservation of nature came to the light at the end 19th century, nature was being conserved from long ago by the indigenous people (Berkeley University 2006; San Francisco State University 2004). From the beginning of history, Indigenous people have been entirely depending on floras and faunas where they subsist. In doing so, they have developed and continue to develop indigenous/ traditional ecological knowledge of resources management (Ulluwishewa et al. 2008 & Notzke, 1994). Natural resources management is not a new practice rather it has been a practice from long ago. To native peoples, understanding as well as the relationship between the natural environment and their life is the natural resources management (Notzke, 1994). These understandings build up by the accumulation of experiences, by informal experiments and by living with nature for decades in a given culture. It is the totality of their experiences, skills and knowledge that make them superior over any particular environment and enable them to optimize benefit their natural environment (IK & DM 1998). By these means native peoples lived by decades and decades and able to get the best possible level of benefit from the nature. In benefiting themselves they had also simultaneously started to conserve nature as their future was dependent on the nature. This traditional conservation may be not always sustainable on the basis of modern knowledge, but the process was started long ago and thus the concept of resources management is not a new one. The modern idea of natural resources management was introduced to ensure a balance between exploitation and conservation of natural resources by combining contemporary and scientific knowledge. During the first phase of the natural resources management process, traditional ecological knowledge/indigenous knowledge was seen as an obstacle to efficient resource management, though at