Ducks Unlimited Annual Report
Transcription
Ducks Unlimited Annual Report
Ducks Unlimited Annual Report No. F o r g e n e r ati o n s , m i g r ati n g wate r f ow l h av e aw e d a n d i n s p i r e d u s w ith th e i r i n n ate a b i l it y to f ly th o u s a n d s o f m i l e s ac ro s s th e co nti n e nt a n d a r r i v e at o n e s p ec i f i c pr a i r i e p oth o l e o r w i nte r h av e n . W h e th e r h e a d i n g n o rth f o r th e s p r i n g o r so u th f o r th e w i nte r , th e s e b i r d s s e e m to h av e a n i nte r n a l f l i g ht p l a n , a n d so do e s D u c k s U n l i m ite d. O u r p l a n i s to co n s e rv e th e m o s t c r iti c a l and thre ate n e d we tl ands and wate rfowl hab itats on the contin e nt. L a st ye ar , DU m a d e g r e at p rog r e s s towa r d th at goa l , a n d th i s y e a r , w e ’ r e ta k i n g f l i g ht towa r d e v e n g r e ate r ac h i e v e m e nt s . A Bird’s Eye View Ducks Unlimited’s members and volunteers are one of our greatest strengths. Few organizations have such a committed and dedicated group of suppor ters. In par t, that’s because DU suppor ters have a deep and personal understanding of wetlands and waterfowl. For many, it’s a passion rooted in early mornings on the marsh with good friends, good dogs and hopefully a good hunt. It’s a feeling, a tradition, a heritage we all want to preserve, and we’re determined to do that through long-term habitat conservation. Fiscal Year 2007 marked DU’s 70th anniversary and ushered in a new era of habitat conservation. Looking back, we do so with a new perspective— a bird’s-eye view, so to speak. From this vantage point, we see more than 12 million acres conserved, thanks to generations of concerned sportsmen and other conservationists. But we also see more native prairie plowed and wetlands drained every day. Looking ahead, we see new horizons and opportunities for Ducks Unlimited. We also see new challenges. Urban sprawl and population growth are putting increasing pressure on the land and tapping our water resources to near depletion. We’ve seen how the face of conservation can change. We understand the dynamics at play. And we have a plan to meet those challenges head-on. It’s called Wetlands for Tomorrow, the largest conservation campaign in history. In this, our second year of the campaign, we’re well on our way to raising the $1.7 billion needed to conserve some of the most critical and threatened habitats on the continent. We’ve highlighted a few of these habitats in this report. Places like the Prairie Pothole Region, where DU is conserving some of the most productive waterfowl breeding grounds in the world. Places like 2 the Gulf Coast of Louisiana, where we’re on the front lines of a battle to prevent further wetland loss and conserve those that remain. Across North America, DU is making measurable progress in all of our priority areas. Last year, we raised $213 million to restore and protect more than 230,000 acres of critical habitat in the United States alone. But we know our work is far from complete. Every year, we continue to lose 80,000 wetland acres across the country. Ducks Unlimited is uniquely positioned to reverse that trend. As the world’s largest wetland and waterfowl conservation group, we have the international network, internal infrastructure and scientific knowledge to achieve our conservation mission. Most importantly, we have the passion and the people to get the job done. That passion and commitment were palpable at our annual convention in May, when we elected a new board of directors who promise to catalyze even greater conservation achievements for DU. We also introduced DU’s “Flight Plan,” a five-year business plan to guide DU through our Wetlands for Tomorrow campaign and beyond. DU’s conservation work continues to include onthe-ground habitat projects with private landowners and public agencies, as well as a growing focus on public policy. As we’ve seen, decisions made in Washington about the farm bill, the Clean Water Act and other federal programs have a profound effect on millions of acres, millions of waterfowl and our ability to conserve habitat. DU is an ambitious organization, always pushing ourselves to do better and do more. As we launch into this new era of conservation, we look back with pride on our first 70 years. We look forward with anticipation, knowing that as we grow, we will become even more efficient and effective. We want you with us all the way, because on the horizon we see abundant habitat filling the skies with waterfowl today, tomorrow and forever. Sincerely, Bruce Lewis President D. A. (Don) Young Executive Vice President The Flight Plan Wat e r f ow l a r e e f f i c i e n t b i r d s . T h e y d o n ’ t wa s t e e n e rg y o n u n n e c e s s a ry t r av e l . Th e y do n ’ t s p e n d ti m e o n tr i v i a l th i n g s . Th e y co n c e ntr ate o n ly o n w h at b e n e f it s t h e m m o s t: f o o d, s u rv i va l a n d r e p ro d u c t i o n . E v e ry w i n g b e at, e v e ry t u r n ta k e n by a m i g r ati n g d u c k h a s a p u r p o s e . S u c h i s th e wo r l d o f D u c k s U n l i m ite d. W ith l i m ite d ti m e a n d f u n d i n g , W E f oc u s o n o u r BUSINESS p l a n TO GUIDE US — o u r m i s s i o n to co n s e rv e th e m o s t i m p o rta nt a n d th r e ate n e d h a b itat s o n th e co nti n e nt. E v e ry do l l a r s p e nt, e v e ry proj ec t u n d e rta k e n i s c a r e f u l ly co n s i d e r e d to e n s u r e th e g r e ate s t b e n e f it f o r th e lo n g e s t ti m e . It ’ s th at g u i d i n g p r i n c i p l e th at l e d DU to i d e nti f y s e v e r a l “ Pr i o r it y A r e a s ” f o r o u r co n s e rvati o n wo r k . Acco r d i n g to h i g h -tec h m a p p i n g a n d o n -th e - g ro u n d r e s e a rc h , th e s e a r e so m e o f th e m o s t c r iti c a l h a b itat s o n th e co nti n e nt. T h e y ’ r e a l so a m o n g th e m o s t e n da n g e r e d. Pintails on a courtship flight. Prairie Pothole Region It’s a peaceful spring morning on the prairie of South Dakota. A cool breeze lifts a pintail hen as she twists and dives in midair, eluding six amorous pintail drakes with her acrobatic flight. With every drop and turn, she tests her suitors in a courtship flight that could make a Blue Angels pilot swoon. She stops, dives, flips and spins hundreds of feet above a blanket of flowing grass. The drake who best matches her flight will likely be the lucky mate she chooses. Grassland conservation is more than a passion for Wendi Rinehart. It’s a way of life. As a rancher in South Dakota, she leads by example, placing conservation easements on her own ranchland and encouraging others to do the same. As a spokeswoman for grassland conservation, Rinehart has turned the heads of state and federal officials, and helped Ducks Unlimited work with other ranchers to conserve critical waterfowl habitat. Selecting a mate, though tiresome and wild, is the easy part. The real challenge lies in successfully hatching a brood in a world of tractors and broken prairie. In the distance, a black plume of smoke serves as a reminder of the danger and destruction that waits on the prairie below. The smoke comes from a four-wheel-drive tractor methodically plowing up native prairie that, until now, couldn’t be farmed; prairie that has hatched thousands of generations of pintails— all gone in a plume of smoke one peaceful South Dakota morning. It’s a tragic scene that’s increasingly common, particularly in the Prairie Pothole Region where the majority of North America’s waterfowl breed. This region got its name from the miles of grassland pocked with wetland “potholes” left by receding glaciers more than 10,000 years ago. For breeding waterfowl, it’s an ideal landscape for nesting and rearing their young. Unfortunately, the grasslands of the Great Plains are dwindling and with them go waterfowl. In the 8 U.S. portion of the Prairie Pothole Region, more than 78 percent of the original grassland nesting cover is already gone. Northern pintail populations have also plummeted. Even during recent wet years when other duck species have multiplied, pintails have failed to rebound. Researchers can’t say exactly why, but prairie loss is one likely culprit, and it’s running rampant today. Despite these changes and challenges, all is not lost. Nearly 23 million grassland acres remain in the pothole country of Montana, North Dakota and South Dakota, and native prairie is still the most abundant nesting cover in the region. But time is running out to conserve it. Recent research conducted by DU and partners shows that some areas will lose half of their remaining grassland during the next 34 years. Thankfully, we have a solution—and it’s one that appeals to ranchers and farmers. Today, more than 700 landowners are hoping to protect a combined total of more than 367,000 acres. Unfortunately, DU lacks the funding to meet this demand. The prairie’s best hope for conservation lies in direct conservation efforts like DU’s North American Grasslands Conservation Initiative, launched as part of Wetlands for Tomorrow. Through this initiative, DU is working with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) to purchase perpetual grassland easements from landowners across the Dakotas and Montana. Last year, DU worked with private landowners and the USFWS to conserve more than 59,000 acres in the Missouri Coteau, a region of the prairies known as the best habitat for breeding waterfowl. Since the inception of DU’s first grassland conservation initiative, Grasslands for Tomorrow, DU has permanently protected more than 670,000 acres with conservation easements on the prairies. To help support DU’s grasslands conservation work, visit www.ducks.org/grasslandinitiative S E E I N G I S B E LI E V I N G Nothing compares with experiencing the Prairie Pothole Region firsthand. Whistling wings and courtship calls. Sapphire wetlands nestled in an endless sea of grass. Thanks to the generosity of three donors, the public can now revel in the sights and sounds of the prairie on DU’s newest property, the Coteau Ranch. It started when Saf and Betty Peacock, two longtime waterfowl hunters and DU supporters, donated 160 acres next to the 6,500-acre Davis Ranch, which was also protected, in part, with major funding from the Peacocks. “Conservation is important to us,” Peacock explains. “When we felt we were able to make a major contribution to conservation, our friend Frank Bellrose told us the best thing we could do for ducks was to help preserve land in the Missouri Coteau, so that’s what we did.” The Peacocks weren’t alone in their conservation mission. Adjoining their donated land were two parcels of prime waterfowl breeding habitat that were for sale. The owner of one parcel decided to donate his property to DU. A philanthropist then bought the second ranch and donated it to DU as well. Both donors requested no recognition. As a result, 2,500 contiguous acres of some of the best duck breeding habitat in the world are conserved forever. On what we now call the Coteau Ranch, DU is restoring native prairie, increasing nesting habitat and setting an example for land stewardship. Coteau Ranch is open for public hunting, and features an interpretive trail for visitors. It’s a place for education, research and inspiration. A place to showcase the best habitat and the best of DU’s conservation work. A place for the ducks. The Prairie Pothole Region once formed the core of the largest grassland-wetland ecosystem in the world. Today, croplands are replacing native habitat that’s nearly impossible to restore. A lesser scaup glides through boreal waters. Western Boreal Forest Flying low over the Western Boreal Forest of northern Canada and central Alaska, you can imagine the vast wilderness that our ancestors encountered as pioneers in North America. Mile upon mile of spruce and aspen forest is broken only by sparkling lakes, pristine wetlands, meandering rivers and some of the largest inland river deltas in the world. For years, Clarann and Stephen Petersen struggled to farm a drained wetland basin on their family farm in the Boreal region. Originally, the wetland was drained to drill an oil well on the property. Tired of fighting nature with little results, the well site was reclaimed and the Petersens contacted DU about restoring their wetland. They couldn’t be happier with their decision. Today, waterfowl and other wildlife flock to the Petersen’s wetland. Their two sons, Matthew and Ben, are home-schooled and say the wetland is a science lab in their own backyard. Spanning some 1.8 million square miles, the Western Canada are predicted to increase by as much as To prepare and plan for the future, DU is creating Boreal Forest annually hosts up to 41 percent of the 4 degrees Celsius—among the largest increases on a comprehensive habitat inventory of the region. continent’s breeding waterfowl—including 12-14 the continent. This warming trend will likely cause DU biologists and mapping specialists are conduc- million ducks—making it the second-most important more frequent drought and flooding. Vegetation waterfowl breeding area in North America. Even more zones and wildlife species may shift northward, and birds flock to the region when the prairies are dry. as much as 60,000 square miles of the forest may But today, the boreal landscape is changing. Forest products companies have secured timber rights to Through its Western Boreal Forest Conservation the majority of the commercially harvestable timber Initiative, DU is laying the groundwork for large-scale in the southern boreal forest. In other areas, petroleum conservation efforts in this region. DU and partners production, oil sands mining and hydroelectric development could also threaten boreal wetlands and other wildlife habitats. 12 become suitable for small grain farming. are working with resource extraction companies and natural resource managers to ensure that development activities are conducted in a sustainable manner that While the impacts of natural resources development will not harm wetlands and waterfowl populations. are readily apparent, a more insidious threat possibly DU is also working with indigenous citizens, govern- faces waterfowl and other boreal wildlife: climate ments and industries to secure large blocks of protected change. Temperatures in parts of north-central habitat throughout the Western Boreal Forest. ting extensive air and ground surveys to verify satellite images, classify wetland habitats, determine water chemistry and monitor waterfowl populations throughout the spring, summer and fall. Additional research will study the importance of these habitats to waterfowl and other wildlife, as well as the potential impact resource development will have on boreal wetlands. This information will help DU prioritize, plan and deliver conservation work throughout the Western Boreal Forest. To help conserve vital habitat in the boreal forest, visit www.ducks.org/borealforest PH I L A NTH RO PI ST I N TH E FO R E ST On a crisp winter morning in 1948, Ruel and Jane Johnson took their young son, Bill, on his first hunting trip. It was the beginning of a lifelong commitment to waterfowl and conservation. For the Johnsons, waterfowl hunting was a way of life; conservation, a passion and an ethic they hoped to instill in their son. Leading by example, Ruel supported DU for 25 years before he passed away in 1983, but his conservation legacy lives on in his son. Bill Johnson knows from experience that successful conservation must be comprehensive conservation. Habitat is crucial at every point in the waterfowl life cycle. That’s why Johnson, who lives in California, has generously supported DU’s work in the Western Boreal Forest. He also supports a conservation easement in Alberta, a wetlands restoration project in Idaho and a land acquisition opportunity in Utah. “I chose to start with the boreal forest because this one habitat impacts millions of ducks and geese, and we have a unique opportunity to conserve it in its natural state right now,” Johnson says. “The boreal forest is especially important to pintails in the Pacific Flyway. Considering their current population predicament, I wanted to do something for pintails in particular, which is why I supported the projects I did.” Johnson hopes his gifts will catalyze more contributions to each of these projects. DU typically leverages private gifts with public funding sources, raising five to seven times the original donation. Johnson says this leveraging ability is one of the main reasons he supports DU. “Ducks Unlimited does a great job of conserving waterfowl habitat,” Johnson says. “They also use the money very effectively—the majority of their money goes into actual conservation work versus overhead.” Like his father, Johnson is leading by example to keep his family’s conservation ethic and hunting traditions alive. A DU biologist conducts a ground survey of waterfowl in the boreal forest. Results will help identify habitat needs of boreal birds and sensitivities to nearby forestry practices. A mallard makes his approach. Mississippi Alluvial Valley Like metal to a magnet, waterfowl flock by the millions to the Mississippi River every year. It’s the largest river in North America, with a watershed covering 41 percent of the lower 48 states. Likewise, more than 40 percent of the continent’s waterfowl annually funnel into the river’s southern basin, known as the Mississippi Alluvial Valley (MAV). Millions stay for the winter. Millions more follow the river farther south to the Gulf Coast of Louisiana. Wade Litton understands what it takes to ensure the survival of his hunting heritage. It’s something he learned from his father, and something he’ll pass on to the next generation. It’s a balance. It’s knowing that giving is equally as important as taking. He’s grown up around farming and now holds a position in the family business, Wade, Inc. Litton understands that while the earth provides sustenance, it’s our responsibility to sustain nature’s resources. Our hunting heritage–indeed, our livelihoods–rest in the balance. In its natural state, the Mississippi was a wild and downstream into the Gulf of Mexico. These excess Armed with this information, DU is working on long- winding river that flooded almost every winter, nutrients have created a vast area of hypoxic water in term solutions to conserve habitat for waterfowl in the inundating millions of acres of forested wetlands and the Gulf known as the “Dead Zone.” MAV. Conservation easements are one of the most open marshes. This created a paradise for wintering waterfowl. The legendary swamps, bayous and flooded forests of the Mississippi Alluvial Valley provided a perfect combination of food and shelter for the birds. But all is not lost. While extensively altered, the MAV remains a winter haven for millions of ducks and geese. It’s the most important wintering area on the continent for mallards. Many other waterfowl species including Over the years, the mighty Mississippi has been partially tamed. In the name of progress, flood pintail, wigeon, green-winged teal and gadwall winter here in spectacular numbers. date, DU has secured nearly 90,000 acres of habitat with conservation easements in the MAV. More than 2,300 acres were secured last year alone. To complement these easements, DU also helps restore and manage lands enrolled in the federal Wetlands Reserve Program and on state and federal lands. Through permanent control, agriculture and development, its course has 16 effective tools to permanently protect habitat here. To been straightened, its swamps drained and its channels Ducks Unlimited recently completed a landscape ana- protection plans and comprehensive conservation deepened. This has caused an almost unprecedented lysis of the MAV. Using satellite imagery and remote solutions like these, DU is making great strides toward loss of wetland habitat crucial to migrating and sensing technology, DU mapped and classified all the conserving an extensive habitat base for wintering wintering waterfowl. Wetlands also trap runoff, remaining waterfowl wintering habitat in the region. waterfowl in the MAV forever. filtering contaminants before they reach the river. The results of this work show that most of the MAV’s In areas where wetlands have been drained, nutrients remaining waterfowl habitat is currently unprotected pass directly into the Mississippi River and flow and vulnerable to loss or further degradation. To help conserve vital waterfowl habitat in the mav, visit www.ducks.org/mav H O PE I N TH E VA LLE Y Waterfowl and waterfowl hunting are engrained in the history and culture of the Mississippi Alluvial Valley (MAV). From the ducks of Memphis’ Peabody Hotel to Nash Buckingham’s stories of hunting the Delta, it’s a region known for wetlands and waterfowl. Generations of hunters ventured into the swamps and forests of the MAV, establishing traditions and conservation ethics that are still revered today. It’s that way of life, those memories and traditions, that prompted Orrin Ingram III to join Ducks Unlimited in its conservation mission. At age 12, Ingram’s father’s health problems prevented him from taking his son hunting. But that didn’t stop Ingram. “I just bummed off of Dad’s friends and invited myself on their hunts,” Ingram recalls. “They gave Dad so much grief that he eventually bought some hunting land in the MAV.” Ingram has hunted there ever since. The land is near Kentucky’s Ballard County Wildlife Management Area, an 8,200-acre refuge open to public hunting. It’s a habitat close to Ingram’s heart, which is why he wanted to help conserve it. Ingram knows how difficult it is to find a good hunting spot if you don’t own private land, so when the opportunity arose, he jumped at the chance to improve public hunting opportunities. “It’s really important to make sure everybody has a good place to spend some quality time outdoors,” Ingram says. According to Chris Cole, DU’s director of conservation programs in Kentucky, there are plenty of opportunities to restore public habitat in Ballard County. “There are roughly 20,000 publicly owned acres in Ballard County alone,” Cole says. “Thanks to Orrin’s donations, we’re going to work all over those areas, and the vast majority of that land will be open to public hunting.” In the MAV, DU staff works with public partners and private landowners to restore degraded wetlands and conserve existing habitats in perpetuity. A gadwall searches for his next meal. Louisiana’s Coastal Wetlands Louisiana’s nicknames say it all. License plates call it the “Sportsman’s Paradise.” Millions know it as “America’s Wetland.” Others call it the “Bayou State.” Any way you put it, Louisiana is a land entrenched in its outdoor heritage, and rightfully so. The state’s rich marshes and coastal lagoons are among the most important ecosystems in America, influencing the entire nation’s economy, environment and culture. Kent Frelich, a fisherman from Empire, Louisiana, sees the damage from erosion firsthand. Not only are his nets pulling up fewer shrimp daily, but more alarmingly, he says they’re pulling up more and more “chunks of marsh” that are being eaten away by coastal saltwater. At its mouth near the southern tip of Louisiana, the If the current rate of loss continues, an additional Most marine species in the Gulf of Mexico use the Mississippi River once built productive new marshes 800,000 acres of wetlands will disappear by the year state’s coastal wetlands at some time during their life by depositing rich soil carried from the heart of 2040, and the Louisiana shoreline will advance inland cycle. The marshes also serve as a first line of defense North America. Every flood created new wetlands, by as much as 33 miles in some areas. against hurricanes by diminishing storm surges. It’s not too late to save America’s wetland, and the Scientists estimate that one mile of marsh can reduce habitat is too valuable to ignore. Approximately a storm surge by about one foot. while the Gulf of Mexico reclaimed old ones. It was a dynamic system balanced by marsh creation and loss—until now. 40 percent of all the coastal wetlands in the lower Today, Louisiana’s coastal marshes are disappearing. 48 states are located in Louisiana. Each year, as many It started when man tamed the Mississippi River. as 10 million ducks and geese flock to these wetlands. The rich sediment that once spread along the coast Joining them are herons, egrets, ibises and spectacular forming new marsh is now redirected by levees off roseate spoonbills. the continental shelf in the Gulf of Mexico. ship channels that allow saltwater to flow into the interior of the marsh, killing wetland plants. Subsidence and erosion are also eating away at Louisiana’s coast. Every day, the Gulf devours about 20 to curb Louisiana’s wetland loss. Through Wetlands for Tomorrow, DU has pledged $15 million toward this effort, and we are already making progress. Last year, DU conserved more than 20,000 wetland acres Along the coast, birds find a smorgasbord of aquatic Compounding the problem are miles of canals and Ducks Unlimited is launching an unprecedented effort vegetation, seeds, tubers and invertebrates on which to feast during the winter. The food fuels their migration north, sending them back to the breeding in Louisiana, bringing the total to nearly 240,000 acres conserved in the state. Still, we know we have a long way to go before America’s wetland is safe. grounds in prime condition for nesting. 50 acres of coastal wetlands. That equates to the loss But waterfowl aren’t the only beneficiaries of of an area roughly the size of one football field every Louisiana’s wetlands. More than 30 percent of the 30 minutes. Then there’s climate change, which could nation’s commercial fish harvest and 25 percent of raise sea levels and further stress the system. our energy supplies originate along Louisiana’s coast. To help conserve vital waterfowl habitat along the louisiana coast, visit www.ducks.org/lacoast SAV I N G S PO RT S M A N ' S PA R A D I S E Ducks Unlimited is committed to restoring Louisiana’s marshes and preventing further loss. Through the Louisiana Coastal Conservation Initiative, DU is teaming with state agencies such as the Louisiana Department of Natural Resources to complete significant restoration work along the coast. On the public policy front, DU is advocating large-scale Mississippi River diversion projects, which would modify levees and allow water and sediment to flow back into marshlands, restoring the process that historically built Louisiana’s coastal wetlands. Ducks Unlimited is and will continue to be a conservation leader in Louisiana. Combining our engineering and scientific expertise with other partners, we’re tackling largescale restoration efforts, while simultaneously implementing smaller-scale projects to improve management capacity. For example, DU is constructing earthen terraces that reduce saltwater intrusion and help re-establish native grasses in wetlands. We’re also installing water-control structures to help restore natural water and salinity levels in coastal marshes. Through these and similar projects, DU is making a difference in Louisiana, and you can help. Louisiana's coastal marshes are under attack on two fronts. Manmade canals and shipping channels combined with erosion and subsidence claim about 25 square miles of marshland each year. A cinnamon teal enjoying clear waters of the Central Valley. California’s Central Valley Dense fog regularly forms during cool winter nights in the Central Valley of California, where temperatures rarely dip below freezing. In the serenity of a quiet marsh, you wouldn’t know that the ecology of this vast valley is in deep trouble. As agriculture and urban development expand in the region, water is becoming an increasingly rare commodity. A rice farmer and land developer, Al Montna, became the first landowner in California's Central Valley to place his land in an agricultural conservation easement held by Ducks Unlimited. As current Chairman of the California Board of Food and Agriculture, Chairman of the USA Rice Federation and duck club owner, Montna advocates wildlife-friendly agriculture, protection of farmland and continuing waterfowling traditions. Flanked by coastal mountains and the Sierra Nevada is part of the region’s appeal for waterfowl. Flooded increases, urban development, wildlife and agriculture range, the Central Valley was once a wet world of fields of waste rice and other grain crops offer food are in direct competition for limited space and water. serpentine streams and rivers, sprawling lakes, lush for migrating and wintering ducks and geese. In grasslands and wetlands annually fed by mountain some years, the Central Valley hosts more than shortages. With such dramatic population growth runoff and seasonal flooding. Over the years, more 60 percent of the Pacific Flyway’s waterfowl. expected in the future, the region’s remaining wetlands and more people have settled in this fertile landscape, The wetlands of the legendary Grasslands region must be conserved today. Ducks Unlimited believes and today, the Central Valley’s vineyards, orchards alone regularly support more than 1 million dabbling that a balance between the needs of people and and fields produce one quarter of America’s food. ducks. Nowhere in the world do more waterfowl wildlife is possible. DU is working with agriculture As agriculture and industry took hold, the Central rely on a smaller wetland base. and urban interests to raise awareness about the Valley suffered extensive wetland losses. Of the 4 million wetland acres that once existed in the region, only 9 percent—or about 350,000 acres— remain intact. 24 The Central Valley already is facing severe water importance of wetlands and how conserving them Unfortunately, this wetland base is rapidly declining. During the next 35 years, the Central Valley’s human population is expected to more than double, from benefits everyone. DU is also working closely with agriculture and other groups to secure long-term water supplies for wetlands through public policy. 5.7 million people today to an estimated 13.1 million. Despite such drastic losses, the Central Valley remains It’s the fastest growing region in one of the fastest a haven for waterfowl. In fact, intensive agriculture growing states in the nation. As the demand for land To help conserve vital wetlands in california's central valley, visit www.ducks.org/centralvalley H OW YO U C A N H E LP The situation in California’s Central Valley is indicative of a larger problem that increasingly threatens North America’s wetlands. As populations boom in the United States and beyond our borders, more habitat will fall victim to the growing need for land and water. North America has already lost more than half of its original wetlands, and every year at least 80,000 more acres are lost in the United States alone. Restoring drained wetlands and protecting those that remain are the only ways to reverse this trend. The implications of continued habitat loss are alarming, not only for waterfowl enthusiasts, but also for everyone in North America. Wetlands are crucial to the health of our environment. They purify our groundwater and filter contaminants before they reach rivers, lakes and streams. Wetlands help control flooding and storm surges and provide habitat for more than 900 wildlife species— not to mention the pure, wholesome fun they provide for families and friends who hunt, fish and enjoy the great outdoors. The good news is we can conserve North America’s wetlands and waterfowl habitats. One of the best ways to help is by supporting Ducks Unlimited’s conservation work on the ground. Through DU’s Wetlands for Tomorrow campaign, you can help conserve some of the most vital and threatened habitats on the continent. To find out more about DU’s Wetlands for Tomorrow campaign and what you can do to make a lasting difference, visit www.ducks.org/wetlandsfortomorrow. DU is helping find sustainable solutions to the Central Valley's water problem. This dam and fish ladder will flood wetlands for waterfowl while keeping salmon in their native streams. Spreading Our Wings 2 0 07 m a r k e d D u c k s U n l i m ite d’ s 70th a n n i v e r s a ry. It wa s a y e a r to r e m e m b e r , a n d DU ’ s vo lu nte e r s co m m e m o r ate d it w e l l . Th a n k s to th e i r pa s s i o n a n d co m m itm e nt, DU ’ s g r a s s root s fundr aisers b ro u g ht in more th a n $48 million for h a b itat co n s e rvati o n . A n d f o r e v e ry do l l a r r a i s e d, DU s p e nt 87 c e nt s d i r ec tly o n o u r h a b itat co n s e rvati o n m i s s i o n . A lot h a s c h a n g e d ov e r DU ' s f i r s t 70 y e a r s , b u t o n e th i n g r e m a i n s th e s a m e : DU ' s m i s s i o n . D u c k s U n l i m ite d h a s a lways f oc u s e d o n h a b itat co n s e rvati o n f o r wate r f ow l a n d a lways w i l l . To day, th at m i s s i o n i s m o r e i m p o rta nt th a n e v e r . A s th e th r e at s to N o rth A m e r i c a’ s h a b itat s e x pa n d, w e ’ r e s pr e a d i n g o u r w i n g s w ith n e w a n d i n n ovati v e prog r a m s to g e t m o r e p eo p l e i n vo lv e d i n h a b itat co n s e rvati o n . D uc k J am B uilds a Roc k ing Tradition The Aggieland Chapter of Ducks Unlimited hosted its 2nd Annual Duck Jam concert, sponsored by Budweiser, on April 11 in College Station. More than 4,000 students and adults flooded into Wolf Pen Creek Amphitheatre to experience what happens when great Texas Country music collides with Ducks Unlimited! The all-day event featured bands such as Rich O’Toole, Wade Bowen, Micky and The Motorcars, Jason Boland and the Stragglers, and two Texas Music favorites: Reckless Kelly and The Randy Rogers Band. Since the first Duck Jam in 2006, attendance grew by 1,000 people, making this concert series a mainstay in the Texas music arena. The 3rd Annual Duck Jam is already set for April 26, 2008, so mark your calendars and don’t miss this electrifying event! Other small-venue Texas concerts to promote and raise funds for DU have occurred in Austin, Corpus Christi, San Marcos, and College Station. Together these shows had over 1,000 in attendance. Waterfowl H unter Parties There’s a new gig in town for the hard-core duck hunter. DU’s Waterfowl Hunter Parties are a bash for hunters, by hunters. These Ducks Unlimited fundraising events feature more than 60 dozen Greenhead Gear decoys, Avery blinds and, of course, guns. The atmosphere is pure hunting. Simply wearing camo gives you a shot at winning a Benelli Nova 12-gauge Max-4 camo shotgun. Purchase a ticket for an event near you at www.ducks.org/whp H unt & H ome : A re You Game ? In January 2006, Ducks Unlimited launched Hunt & Home, a novel new fund-raising idea bringing habitat conservation and wild-game cooking together for a tasty good time. Here’s how it works: DU volunteers host a Hunt & Home party at their home, office, or favorite gathering place. Guests hear from volunteers about DU, watch an award-winning video and peruse our catalog. They sample exclusive DU food as the host offers cooking demonstrations. And thanks to the volunteer support of Hunt & Home advisors and hosts, 100 percent of party profits are devoted to DU’s habitat conservation work. More than 100 volunteer leaders are hosting parties and introducing DU to new supporters across the country. To learn more about hunt & home, visit www.ducks.org/huntandhome 38 Project W ebfoot gets a Roc k- S olid Boost Morgan Freeman’s Rock River Foundation awarded Ducks Unlimited $25,000 to help increase wetland education programs in Mississippi schools through Project Webfoot. “Enjoying the outdoors is a great part of Mississippi’s history. Even so, many of our youth have not had opportunities to witness wildlife and wetlands firsthand,” said Phillip “Otey” Sherman, member of the Rock River board. “We hope this partnership with Ducks Unlimited exposes these great natural places to our youth.” Through Project Webfoot, DU provides teachers with learning materials that bring the world of wetlands to life for students in grades 4 through 6. Last year, 209 classrooms participated in Project Webfoot, reaching more than 5,000 students, and this year participation has already doubled. As a supporter of DU’s conservation work and a spokesman for the Wetlands for Tomorrow campaign, Morgan Freeman regularly demonstrates his commitment to conservation. By supporting Project Webfoot, Freeman and the Rock River Foundation are ensuring the future of wetlands and habitat conservation. 39 Birds Of A Feather D U s u p p o rte r s a r e th e k i n d o f p eo p l e w h o wa nt to m a k e a d i f f e r e n c e i n th e wo r l d. W e wa nt to l e av e a l eg ac y o f h e a lth y h a b itat a n d a b u n da nt w i l d l i f e f o r o u r c h i l d r e n a n d g r a n dc h i l d r e n to e n j oy. F o r so m e D U do n o r s , th e b e s t way to do th at i s th ro u g h D U ’ s M a j o r S p o n so r prog r a m . W h e th e r it ’ s a c a s h g i f t o r e s tate p l a n n i n g , th e s e g e n e ro u s p h i l a nth ro p i s t s go a b ov e a n d b e yo n d th e c a l l o f du t y, g i v i n g a n d do i n g m o r e f o r D u c k s U n l i m ite d a n d o u r co n s e rvati o n m i s s i o n . B I L LY O E H M I G Billy Oehmig’s passion for conservation is rooted in a childhood spent outside. “I grew up in the country, on the dirt roads and back roads,” Oehmig recalls. “Dad gave me a pointer puppy and took me quail and dove hunting at an early age. But duck hunting was always special. You like most what you get the least of, and we didn’t have many ducks in south Georgia. That’s what made me care about conservation.” As an adult, Oehmig moved to Texas, where he joined the local DU committee and got serious about conservation. “It’s inherent in those of us who are able to do so to pass along a legacy of conservation and preservation, not only for waterfowl, but for all wildlife species,” Oehmig says. “I think that’s our duty, and I take it seriously.” Oehmig has given generously to DU initiatives on both breeding and wintering areas. Most recently, he donated and endowed three conservation easements on his property in Texas. Working with DU biologists, he has turned the habitat into a winter haven for waterfowl and many other wildlife species. “It’s not only for ducks and geese, it’s for everything else that comes down the pipe,” Oehmig says. “Whether it’s watching the hummingbirds that migrate at the same time as the teal or the painted buntings that come down a little later, it’s just one of nature’s true joys. It’s kind of like looking at wood ducks in full plumage. You’ve just got to say, ‘Oh wow, how can we make sure the next generation gets to see the same thing?’” Oehmig found the answer in Ducks Unlimited. Through conservation easements and projects on the prairies, he’s helped conserve habitat forever. 33 DAV I D K . W E L L E S J R . Conservation comes naturally for Deke Welles of Perrysburg, Ohio. His parents planted the seed of conservation in Welles, but what made it grow was witnessing habitat destruction firsthand. “I live in northwest Ohio, and at one point, this whole area was referred to as the Great Black Swamp,” Welles says. “But now more than 95 percent of its wetlands have been drained for agriculture and development. The county to our south was once terrific habitat for pheasants and other wildlife, but with the draining of the swamp and changes in agricultural practices, the waterfowl and pheasants disappeared.” That experience inspired Welles to take a proactive approach to conservation. Today, he supports DU as a volunteer and major sponsor. He serves on DU’s Wetlands America Trust board and generously endorses DU’s conservation work in the Great Lakes region. “I recognized how vulnerable our remaining wetlands are, especially in northwest Ohio, where we have continuing urbanization, development and problems with invasive species,” says Welles. “Knowing it’s possible to restore some aspects of the Great Black Swamp and maintain existing wetlands is what drives my commitment to conservation. In addition, we have a sizeable black duck population in this area that also needs to be sustained, and DU’s conservation work is doing all of the above.” As a member of Winous Point Shooting Club and president of the Winous Point Marsh Conservancy, Welles also supports local conservation efforts. It’s all part of a conservation ethic—the desire to give something back—that keeps Welles and other major donors making a difference for DU. Making a difference for the ducks. D R . & M R S . M AC K K A R N E S When asked why he cares about conservation, Dr. Mack Karnes recalls his childhood in southern Illinois. Every fall, when the air turned crisp and skeins of geese honked overhead, Karnes felt a spark inside. “I wasn’t quite sure why, but I knew there was something special about the fall and those geese flying south,” Karnes recalls. Today, Karnes is doing his part to keep the geese and ducks flying for generations to come. Dr. Karnes and his wife, Debra, are longtime supporters of Ducks Unlimited’s Living Lakes Initiative, giving generously to support conservation in the Great Lakes region. “The Great Lakes are an incredible resource,” Karnes says. “They’re important not only to me and to waterfowl, but to this country and the world. I think that one of the things the Lord told us to do was ‘tend the garden,’ and that’s what Debra and I are trying to do. We’re tending the garden, and giving back what was given to us.” 34 TH E WA L K E R FO U N DATI O N In 1973, William “Bill” Walker Jr. of Jackson, Mississippi, purchased some property along the Mississippi River where Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi meet. His vision was not just to restore the land, but to turn it into the nicest habitat in the country. For that, he turned to Ducks Unlimited. Thus began a conservation partnership that still thrives today. Walker was a staunch supporter of Ducks Unlimited, and his conservation legacy lives on through the Walker Foundation. “We have continued to support and tried to continue his vision for the foundation in restoring habitat specifically in the Mississippi, Arkansas and Louisiana area,” says William “Will” Walker III, who now runs the foundation with his mother and two sisters. “We’ve also started supporting DU’s GIS [Geographical Information Systems] work in the South in addition to on-the-ground restoration in the three-state area.” Supporting conservation comes naturally for the entire Walker family. “The whole family has a passion for the outdoors,” says Walker. “My sisters and I grew up in the outdoors and are all avid hunters, my mother, too. She loves just getting out and seeing the wildlife and wild places.” A lot has changed since 1973. The Walker family now includes 10 grandchildren, and many more acres conserved. The family still owns and visits the same land Bill Walker bought in 1973, but it’s different too. What was once sub-par habitat is now a haven for wintering waterfowl—proof that visions can come true and conservation works. CO N O CO PH I L L I P S The fast-paced world of corporate America hasn’t diminished the connection to the great outdoors for ConocoPhillips. As a leading producer of oil and natural gas, ConocoPhillips recognizes the finite nature of the earth’s natural resources and the need to practice wise stewardship. “We believe in striving for sustainable development,” said Bob Ridge, vice president of Health, Safety & Environment for ConocoPhillips. “One of our particular environmental interests is conserving the natural habitat of migratory birds, a mission that has been at the forefront of our environmental efforts for decades. This mission is critical in an increasingly crowded world that is rapidly encroaching on vital habitat in many areas.” ConocoPhillips has long endorsed the work of Ducks Unlimited to conserve waterfowl habitat, particularly in the Playa Lakes region, funding more than 250 related conservation projects over the past 17 years. The region is a recharge zone for the Ogallala Aquifer and a source of shelter, food and water for wildlife. It’s also the site of much of ConocoPhillips’ asset base and home to many of its employees. To help conserve playa habitats, ConocoPhillips supports DU. “We view Ducks Unlimited as a leader in habitat restoration and conservation efforts, from the Arctic regions of Alaska and Canada to the wintering areas in the southern United States,” said Ridge. “DU’s work is well known and highly respected throughout the conservation community. We can rest assured that contributions made through Ducks Unlimited will make a tangible impact, and will be leveraged along with the contributions of others.” 35