Wildlife Action Center
Welcome to the Wildlife Action Center. Here you can:
- Take Action to Help Wildlife
- Adopt a WildLifeStyle, helping to save wildlife and lands Around the House, In Your Backyard, Online, or In Your Community
- Find Events Near You
- Start or Join a Discussion
Ready to get involved? Why not learn about joining our Wildlife Volunteer Corps, or learn how to become a leader in your community on wildlife issues. Need some motivation? Reading our success stories might do the trick!
Save the Lolo 75
Other Actions
- Tell Congress: Don't Slash Wildlife Conservation: Tell Congress to stand up for wildlife and keep America's treasures off the chopping block.
- Protect Wolves on National Forests: Tell President Obama and Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack to stop the shoot-on-sight wolf plan for wolves on our National Forests.
- Stop the Backroom Attack on Wildlife: Tell your Senators that any comprehensive spending bill for the federal government should ensure vital funding for conservation programs and be free of anti-wildlife provisions.
- Take Action for Wolves, Sea Turtles and Manatees: Speak out for imperiled animals. Write your Representative now and urge him or her to oppose the Interior spending bill.
- Help Save Sea Turtles from Drowning: Urge the National Marine Fisheries Service to enforce lifesaving protections for threatened and endangered sea turtles in the Gulf.
- Stop Federal Wolf Killing in Idaho: Speak out against Wildlife Services' wolf-killing program in Idaho.
- End the Use of Compound 1080 and Other Deadly Poisons: Urge the Environmental Protection Agency to ban the use of Compound 1080 and sodium cyanide to prevent the poisoning of wildlife struggling to survive.
- Help Save Wild Bison: Urge Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack to stop the annual ritual of hazing and slaughtering of America's wild bison.
Campaigns
| |
Campaign to Save America's Wolves
Defenders of Wildlife continues the fight to promote common sense wolf management, working with federal and state officials and private land-owners to ensure that science, not politics, guides decision-making about the future of these American icons. Read More> |


























