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WYldlife for Tomorrow connects Wyoming tourism and ancillary businesses with important conservation projects designed to protect wildlife habitat in the state. Through innovative, tax-deductible giving initiatives, businesses directly contribute to the success of on-the-ground improvements to the natural infrastructure sustaining our billion-dollar wildlife recreation economy.

As a participant in Wyoming’s tourism economy, you rely on our state’s wild places for your livelihood. WYldlife for Tomorrow provides a simple funding mechanism so you know your business contributions go directly to work sustaining wildlife.

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Sage Grouse Fence Inventory

Through our signature program Wildlife Tourism For Tomorrow we were honored to support important sage-grouse fence inventory work through our good friends at the Jackson Hole Wildlife Foundation.

 

Livestock fence wires can be a significant cause of sage-grouse mortality due to birds hitting wires while in flight. For example, in less than one calendar year, 99 sage-grouse fence collisions were counted on a four-mile stretch of fence in neighboring Sublette County (unpublished data).

Many wildlife accidents and deaths from fences are unreported because they occur out of view or happen with smaller animals that are hard to detect in vegetation. The status of problem fences in sage-grouse core habitat is unknown, making implementing protection plans difficult.

Our funding–a donation of $15,000–has gone to support the Jackson Hole Wildlife Foundation in their work to take all known digital layers of fence and assemble and import them into a field-ready application that can receive data as more work is completed. In summer 2022, this application was beta-tested and improved upon.

Fences on national park and national forest land are also being inventoried with the help of staff, interns, and volunteers. The final product of this effort will allow land managers to prioritize fences for prospective removals and modifications to protect not only sage-grouse, but many other species including migratory mammals and sagebrush songbirds.
Partners involved in this important work are the Jackson Hole Wildlife Foundation, Grand Teton National Park, and the Bridger-Teton National Forest.

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“funding for important conservation projects like highway crossings, habitat improvement, and education of our youth all have the potential to meaningfully contribute in a better future for Wyoming...”

Mark Gordon

Governor

Project Information

location

Wyoming

Project Details

Fence removal

Budget

$15,000

Start time

summer 2022

end time

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