Wild for wolverines
People are showing they are enthusiastically curious about wolverines, and there’s a good reason for that. See what Y2Y and its partners are doing for wolverines, and how you are and can continue to help.
People are showing they are enthusiastically curious about wolverines, and there’s a good reason for that. See what Y2Y and its partners are doing for wolverines, and how you are and can continue to help.
In November 2019, the Alberta government announced that it would commit funding to advance a wildlife overpass east of Canmore, and an underpass in southern Alberta’s Crowsnest Pass. Now, it’s important that we ensure these commitments remain a priority and come to fruition.
Great change can happen when people from different backgrounds put their heads together, hands in the soil and boots on the ground for a common goal. That’s been the case throughout the Bees to Bears Climate Adaptation Project, a partnership between Y2Y and Idaho Fish and Game.
Y2Y’s Jodi Hilty shares a few reasons wide-ranging wolverines are important in the Yellowstone to Yukon region.
When the idea of an interconnected system of wild lands and waters stretching the 2,000 miles (3,200 kilometers) between Yellowstone National Park and Canada’s Yukon was proposed in 1993, some people were incredulous.
Wolverine research aims to understand the elusive mammals better, especially given the impacts of climate change.
This spring, while attending a presentation about our Love Your Headwaters campaign, 11-year-old Drake heard about our work to protect a place he loved — Alberta’s Bighorn. It was at that moment he decided to take action.
Learn how you are making ripples for future water planning in regions such as Idaho’s High Divide.
Are you one of the estimated 15 million people who drink water sourced from rivers in the Yellowstone to Yukon region?