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Welcome to Sage Steppe Wild

Our new conservation organization Sage Steppe Wild seeks to protect, conserve, and restore the wildlands and wildlife of the Western United States, focusing on the vast Sagebrush Sea.

Explore these sagebrush habitats and the native wildlife that inhabit them. We comment on permits, management issues, and projects on public lands, undertake research and monitoring, and educate the public about the sagebrush shrublands, grasslands and steppes, pinyon-juniper woodlands, riparian areas, meadows, and forests of the Great Basin and Intermontane West. We emphasize science and field work as providing the primary basis for achieving our goals of better land management of these high-value and biologically diverse ecosystems.

Larkspur
Needle and Thread
Ungrazed Area

Larkspur (Delphinium sp.) along central Nevada mountain streams. Needle-and-thread grass (Stipa comata). Lush ungrazed needle-and-thread bunchgrass steppe with sagebrush and scattered juniper, central Nevada.

Sage Steppe Wild

UPCOMING TRAINING WORKSHOP:

How Not To Be Cowed

 

Becoming an Effective Warrior

for Our Public Lands

 

When: May 25th -27th

Where: Elko County, Nevada

 

Come join a group of experts in western ecology and federal agencies to learn how to maximize your effectiveness in protecting our public lands. More here.

Black sagebrush (Artemisia nova). 

Sage Steppe Wild is a 501(c)(3) conservation nonprofit. 

Donate to help us protect and restore the sagebrush steppe and Western wildlands.

Sage Grouse
Grizzly
Pronghorn stuck behind fence

Greater sage grouse hen (photo by SSW), pronghorn antelope herd facing a barbed-wire fence (photo by SSW), and a grizzly mother and cub (photo courtesy National Park Service). 

Depiction of biodiversity loss from livestock production

Sage steppe biodiversity loss and groundwater depletion with cattle grazing. Illustration by Karen Klitz.

Fremont

Healing the Land

View of Warner Lakes from Hart Mountain National Antelope Refuge, Oregon. See direct evidence of how removing livestock from public lands can start the process of recovering natural ecosystems. Healing the Land.

Pando Clone

Pando Clone

An ancient aspen clone is impacted by cattle grazing and trampling. 

Jonathan Ratner's research coming soon>>>

Bull Trout

Explore former bull trout streams in northeastern Nevada, discover ancient relict beaver dams before huge livestock impacts. See how we are working to restore these watersheds and native fish. Image courtesy https://www.ndow.org/species/bull-trout/

Karen Klitz's research coming soon>>

Cattle impacts to the Sagebrush Steppe are enormous. Join us to learn how to participate in improving public lands management, and restoring vibrant native ecosystems and wildlife. Learn more

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