As dam removal nationwide accelerates, experts are learning just how quickly rivers and fish respond.
When dams come down, fish come home
The Amah Mutsun tribe rallies to save sacred sites
A proposed sand and gravel mine threatens the heritage of the central California tribe.
After June’s floods, will the Yellowstone River be allowed to roam?
Rock walls called riprap constrain the river to protect property from erosion —but there are other options.
The nonprofits cleaning up the oil and gas industry’s ‘dirty little secret’
These organizations are tackling the vast problem of orphaned wells.
A California fire department forges a new generation of conservation practitioners
In wealthy, segregated Marin County, a pioneering recruitment program breaks down barriers to the firefighting profession
The future of large landscape conservation begins with Indigenous communities
In the Yellowstone to Yukon region, Indigenous peoples manage more than a quarter of protected lands.
How a rare butterfly returned
The revival of Fender’s blue illustrates the collaborative nature of survival.
Carving a future for the Tongass National Forest
In Southeast Alaska, youth help manage a forest and protect an ancient art.
Do bedrock conservation laws need a makeover?
Experts suggest needed upgrades in the face of modern crises.
From dominance to stewardship: Chuck Sams’ Indigenous approach to the NPS
The first Native national parks director talks tribal co-management, historical accuracy, harassment, and the fallacy of “wilderness.”
‘We cannot go backwards in time’
#iamthewest: Giving voice to the people that make up communities in the region.
Conservation is an ecosystem
To protect what needs protecting, repair our ties with one another.
A new chapter for HCN
The organization is putting its building up for sale but will remain in Paonia.
What can conservation learn from science fiction?
New works by Western authors explore the brighter futures of our swiftly tilting planet.
Antidotes for ecological forgetfulness
Bear witness, make a record, pass it on.
Gnarly weddings, arachnid entertainment and gorilla gifts
Mishaps and mayhem from around the region.
In Colorado, a storied valley blooms again
The San Luis Valley’s Acequia Institute is raising new traditions from multicultural roots.
On Hearing the Sonic Boom of a Meteor Over Salt Lake City While Drinking Coffee with Lao-Tzu
A poem by Christopher Cokinos.
Feds claim Defenders of Wildlife unlawfully fired union-organizing staffer
The environmental nonprofit’s work environment is under scrutiny after multiple unfair labor submissions.
Treaty-less tribes struggle to have their rights recognized
A five-year fight over a few dozen clams in Washington highlights the inconsistent rights of Indigenous tribes.
