Exploring the Owyhee Canyonlands
A recent adventure through the Owyhee Canyonlands reignited a fervent commitment to secure its permanent protection as a national monument.
Can you imagine a world filled with more wildlife and wild places? So can we. And we’re working together to make it happen.
Every minute, we’re losing two football fields worth of wild lands, and too many animal species face extinction. It’s up to us to turn things around. We imagine an America with more mountaintops where all we see is forests below, with more rivers that flow wild and free, more shoreline where all we hear are waves. An America with abundant wildlife, from butterflies and bees floating lazily in your backyard, to the howl of a coyote in the distance, to the breach of a whale just visible from the shore. Together, we can work toward this better future.
A recent adventure through the Owyhee Canyonlands reignited a fervent commitment to secure its permanent protection as a national monument.
Sign the petition
Join us on Thursday, May 2 at 5:00 p.m. PT for a virtual event highlighting how bringing back sea otters can benefit our struggling kelp forests.
Attend
VIRTUAL
Zoom
Rule to protect “special areas” in the Western Arctic Reserve will preserve caribou, polar bear and bird habitat for generations to come
The waters off Oregon's central coast conceal one of the most biodiverse ecosystems in the Pacific and on April 30th in downtown Portland, you can learn about it.
At a recent press conference, members of Congress joined forces with tribal and community leaders nationwide to push the Biden Administration for increased protection of national monuments and sacred lands.
A new study suggests rates of population decline are intensifying, but we know there's steps we can take to help Southern Resident orcas.
It's long been thought that orcas consist of multiple species. A newly released study confirms that.