Mount Shasta, snow-covered, loomed in the background. Stretched out before me, marshlands sparkled, and hundreds of white-faced ibis, Wilson’s phalaropes, black-necked stilts, and long-billed dowitchers brought the landscape alive as they twirled, probed, and pranced in pursuit of breakfast. Hundreds (maybe a thousand) red-winged blackbirds winged overhead. The site? Lower Klamath National Wildlife Refuge that straddles the Oregon-California border.
National Wildlife Refuge Association Appoints Desirée Sorenson-Groves As President & CEO
Why Convening Matters for Collaborative Conservation: Establishing the building blocks for the politics of problem solving
Dive into an insightful guest blog by Lynn Scarlett, a board member of the National Wildlife Refuge Association and former Deputy Secretary of the Interior. Explore the importance of collaborative conservation efforts and how they're shaping a sustainable future for our natural world. Lynn sheds light on why coming together to solve environmental challenges is more crucial than ever.