These wild places provide critical habitat for salmon, polar bears, caribou, grizzly bears, whales and many other willdife species. They also are home to Alaska’s indigenous people, who depend on wildlands as a source of food and clean water.
Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
The Arctic Refuge is the crown jewel of the nation's wildlife refuge system. You will not find a more pristine landscape, yet every year oil and gas companies lobby Congress to open the refuge to drilling. Our work aims to protect the refuge from such harmful development.
Arctic Ocean
The Arctic Ocean is under relentless pressure from oil companies who want to drill for oil offshore. An oil spill here could be disastrous for Arctic wildlife and the coastal plain of the Arctic Refuge. We're fighting efforts to drill until more scientific knowledge and effective spill-response technology can be developed.
Western Arctic Reserve
This 22 million-acre region, also known as the Western Arctic Reserve, is vital to millions of migratory birds, thousands of caribou and numerous polar bears, musk oxen and wolves. We’re working with the Interior Department to keep drilling rigs out of the most sensitive areas.
Tongass National Forest
By protecting this ancient forest from saws and roads, The Wilderness Society is helping protect one of the best remaining wild salmon fisheries in the world and some of the last old-growth forest in the nation.
Photo credit: Flikr creative commons: bcanepa_photos
Wilderness is a precious resource with many human, natural and economic benefits that we need to protect.
Need inspiration to protect wilderness? Enter our Wild Days of Summer give-away to win airfare to visit your favorite wild place.
Hear artists, activists and adventurers share what the ownership and legacy of these American wildlands means to them.







