Category: Yellowstone

Helen Seay's portrayal of Jackson Hole Grizzly 399 and cubs was completed literally hours before the famous bear died. Her mural is neither an elegy or eulogy, but a celebration of Greater Yellowstone's living wildlife diversity
The most recognized citizen conservationist in the world, Goodall was wildlife's best friend had special reverence for the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem
In this op-ed Louisa Willcox says wild country and natural lands in America's most iconic wildlife ecosystem are under siege. She says the time is now to safeguard the Gallatin Mountains, one of the last best unprotected stretches of public lands that belong to all citizens in the West
"The Other Ten Wolves," a book by Carter Niemeyer, is a perfect complement to Tom Winston's film "Lost Wolves of Yellowstone." Now 30 years later, they remind that the public never knew how harrowing wolf recovery actually was
Heart of a Lion and Guardians of Yellowstone deliver intimate portraits of the vital role Puma concolor plays in Greater Yellowstone and other wild ecosystems
The American public, especially those who live in the West, need to realize what's at stake for natural landscapes that now are in danger of being permanently (negatively) transformed
Between Wyoming's Winds and Red Desert: Retired rangeland ecologist Dan Stroud returns by singing praise from the heart of a nationally-important wildlife migration corridor whose persistence could go either way
A new groundswell of citizens called M4WW wants to safeguard better protection for Greater Yellowstone's most vulnerable mountain range that still holds world-class wildlife. You need not be a Montanan to support the effort
The story of challenges to grizzly bear recovery in the Northern Rockies needs honesty and truth, not more melodrama, grandstanding and fear
ConservAmerica’s one-day conference in Livingston, Montana Aug. 28 will emphasize the urgent role of private land protection throughout Greater Yellowstone. Without a strategy and more support for conservation the region's famous wildlife migrations may wither and that would be a devastating blow to our first national park