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Conservation requires action on the ground and in the water across Wisconsin to protect and restore our native landscapes and freshwater habitats for people and nature. But we cannot accomplish our work without supportive public policy and funding.
The Nature Conservancy works closely with Wisconsin's state and federal legislators to develop and support legislative policies that make a substantial and lasting contribution to effective conservation of globally significant lands and waters. We also work with partners and state and federal agencies in a variety of ways to create, secure and maintain funding for conservation.
Global temperatures have increased substantially over the past century. Climate change is already affecting our lives and the places we live, and has the potential to dramatically impact the lives of future generations. The Conservancy is joining with policy makers, community members, businesses, scientists, industry leaders and others here in Wisconsin and around the world to slow the pace of climate change.
For more than 17 years, the Knowles-Nelson Stewardship Fund has been a highly successful public-private partnership, securing critical wildlife habitat, conserving the best of outdoor Wisconsin and providing consistent world class outdoor recreation opportunities. It is one of the Conservancy’s best conservation partners and an essential part of our ongoing effort to conserve Wisconsin’s most outstanding lands and waters for nature and people.
Wisconsin's forests are important to our economy and central to our way of life here in the Badger State. But the changing economics of the forest products industry is making forests more valuable as real estate than for timber production. Creating a state companion to the federal Forest Legacy program would help conserve our forests and the many benefits they provide to current and future generations.
Nature picture credits (top to bottom, left to right): Photo © Clint Farlinger (Kangaroo Lake Preserve); Photo © Gerald H. Emmerich, Jr. (Winter ice at Crooked Creek); Photo © Wisconsin Department of Tourism. (canoers).