Ways to Get Involved
Whether you want to further conservation, learn more about nature or share your love of the outdoors, you鈥檝e come to the right place. National wildlife refuges provide many opportunities for you to help your community and fish and wildlife by doing what you love.
National wildlife refuges partner with volunteers, youth groups, landowners, neighbors and residents of urban and coastal communities to make a lasting difference.
Find out how you can help make American lands healthier and communities stronger while doing something personally satisfying.
Volunteers: The refuge is not currently accepting new volunteers at this time. Future volunteer opportunities will be posted .
Friends: Join neighbors in helping refuges restore habitat and expand access to green space. To learn more, please visit the .
Landowners: Learn how you can partner with the Fish and Wildlife Service to voluntarily restore land here.
Local Groups:
Find out how communities can work with refuges better for wildlife and people.
Youth: Explore paid and unpaid opportunities to learn and develop leadership skills here.
Volunteering
Discover for yourself what tens of thousands of volunteers have learned: Volunteering for the bet365下载ios is fun and rewarding in many ways. Master new skills. Meet new friends. Enjoy a sense of accomplishment from doing your part to further wildlife conservation for the pleasure of generations to follow. Individual volunteers must commit to a minimum of 36 hours of volunteer service per year after completing a series of training sessions. If you are an individual interested in volunteering at the Shawangunk Grasslands National Wildlife Refuge, please fill out this individual volunteer application in full and email it to anna_bisson@fws.gov.
For groups that are interested in volunteering, please fill out this group volunteer application in full and email it to anna_bisson@fws.gov.
Our Partners
Nature does not recognize human-made boundaries. In order to conserve our natural and cultural resources effectively, we must work with others to bridge these boundaries. Partnerships foster creative solutions to challenging situations and often the results are greater than the sum of the parts. Learn more about our local partners.
The National Wildlife Refuge System is committed to building partnerships which encourage conservation and preservation of our natural and cultural resources. Partnerships with the Refuge System bring innovative approaches to solving land management and water disputes in the most environmentally protective manner. Scientifically-informed and technologically-based stewardship of our public lands, waters, wildlife and special places must be collaborative efforts between the Refuge System, other government agencies, and private organizations if conservation efforts are to succeed.