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Montana
 
Land Conservation Issues as Big as its Sky
 
 
 
 

Lattés may be as common as lariats in today's Montana. And its easy to see what keeps the natives and lures newcomers: spaces that give real meaning to the words "wide" and "open;" and wildness on a scale mostly gone from much of the lower 48 states, including the Bob Marshall wilderness and two premier National Parks, Yellowstone and Glacier. Troubled species such as the grizzly and gray wolf also roam Montana. So does trouble, in the shape of some of the most pressing land conservation issues in the nation.

Rocky Mountain Front
In the waning hours of the 109th Congress, lawmakers took the crucial steps needed to pass legislation that will ban future oil and gas leasing on 400,000 acres of National Forest and BLM lands along Montana's Rocky Mountain Front.
>> More about energy and the Rocky Mountain Front

Upper Missouri Breaks National Monument
The Upper Missouri River Breaks National Monument in Central Montana protects a landscape remarkably unchanged since the Lewis and Clark expedition passed through it 200 years ago. Whether it remains that way depends on how the Monument is managed, and the management blueprint is now underway. The Wilderness Society and its conservation partners have been working to ensure that the management plan provides a strong framework for protecting the monument's exceptional values.
>> Full Story

Forest Travel Plans: Chance to Throttle Back Motors in the Backcountry
The U.S. Forest Service is developing new travel management plans for Montana's Gallatin and Lewis and Clark National Forests. The plans offer an opportunity to protect important habitat and world-class recreational resources by halting intrusions of new roads and trails that continue to dice up the backcountry.
>> Full Story

The Value of Roadless Areas
Permanently protecting roadless areas across the Northern Rockies is crucial to preserving the wide diversity of animals and plants found in the region, according to new analysis by The Wilderness Society. The study found that roadless lands serve as "bridges" connecting conservation lands needed by wide-ranging wildlife like bears and elk, and as building blocks for larger areas crucial to native species such as bighorn sheep and golden eagles.
>> More on the new study

Yellowstone to Yukon: A Bold Vision
From Yellowstone National Park to the Yukon Territory, the Rocky Mountains are one of the world's most loved and celebrated mountain ranges. Both the U.S. and Canadian national park systems were born there. Conservationists from both nations have come together to protect this unique mountain ecosystem, its wildlife and the quality of life of its people.
>> Full Story


 

Latest News [Show]

- Public Officials, Renewable Industry Representatives Call West-wide Energy Corridors Process Missed Opportunity, Possible Disaster

 

Facts & Publications [Show]

- Priority BLM Lands of the West & Alaska [pdf]

 
Photo: Missouri River in the Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Refuge. Rick & Susie Graetz.
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