A Voice for Pollinators and People: Meet One of Utah's Latinx Conservation Leaders

We've loved celebrating Latinx/Hispanic American Heritage Month with our community, joining the Latinxs in the Field event, and sharing Latinx stories. To close this month with meaning, we're excited to share our latest video highlighting Emmanuel Santa-Martínez.

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Sierra Hastings
Inmigración: A Human-Monarch Story

Happy Latinx/Hispanic American Heritage Month! We're grateful to celebrate with our amazing community of volunteers, donors, and friends.

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Announcing Our New Interim Executive Director

We’re excited to announce our new Interim Executive Director: Janice Gardner! Gardner has been a Conservation Ecologist at Sageland Collaborative for over five years, leading with both a deep passion for wildlife and a marked ability to achieve large-scale conservation impacts.

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Pausing to Reflect: Your Impact on Wildlife Last Year

Check out our 2022 Impact Report to reflect on everything you made possible on your favorite projects last year. Please reach out with any thoughts or questions. Thank you for all you do for our beloved land and wildlife in the West.

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Entangled Histories at Galena Soónkhani Nature Preserve

May was American Wetlands Month, and we hope you celebrated by visiting one of these life-filled habitats scattered across the West. (If not, June is a great time for a wetland visit!)

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The Pink Finches Warming High Desert Winters

For those of us in the West, this winter felt like it may never end. Our dedicated Rosy-Finch Project volunteers, however, had an unlikely source of warmth: a finch that splashes pink across white winter skies.

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Sierra Hastings
The Land Loves Us Back

Our riverscape restoration work involves many partners all united in a shared goal: healthier landscapes that can sustain future generations of wildlife and people. A committed group of landowners have worked tirelessly over many years to heal one Utah stream. Check out our recent video to hear these landowners tell their restoration story.

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Grouse Poop or Creative Cryptograms?

In 2019, our team participated in a Bioblitz with BYU lichenologist Steve Leavitt, which resulted in a new lichen discovery. "As we looked, I recognized the genus of one lichen, but it was such a wacky, weird shape. Here we are in the middle of Glen Canyon, and we find this new lichen whose closest relative is in Scandinavia!” Discoveries like these are important disruptions in a world dominated by human perspectives and hierarchies.

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Save the Date: Community Science Project Training!

It's nearly time for our community science project trainings! This year, we're excited to announce that they will be held in person at the Natural History Museum of Utah. Register here to join us!

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Water Is Life for Conservation in the West

Ask any conservationist, and they’ll agree on at least one thing: in nature, everything is connected. Whether focusing on fire management, bear population monitoring, human recreation, or the tiniest microbialites in Great Salt Lake, they know that pulling on one thread in the landscape brings all kinds of connected species, processes, and habitats with it.

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