SALEM – Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife officials
today reminded Oregonians who want to help conserve the state’s non-game
species and their habitats to contribute to the Non-game Wildlife Fund
by checking the box on their state income tax form this year.
Established by the Oregon Legislature in 1979, the Non-game Wildlife
Fund supports conservation efforts for the 88 percent of Oregon’s
wildlife species that are not hunted, fished or trapped. Since its
inception the fund has helped:
• recover the American bald eagle, peregrine falcon and western snowy
plover from the brink of extinction;
• develop conservation programs for countless sensitive species
including the western pond turtle, Willamette Valley grassland birds,
yellow-legged frog, Townsend's big-eared bat and white-headed
woodpecker;
• improve wildlife habitats on both private and public lands; and,
• provide opportunities to watch, photograph, study and appreciate
wildlife in their natural setting.
The ODFW Wildlife Diversity Program manages Oregon's non-game fish
and wildlife, including 37 threatened and endangered species and 121
sensitive species. Wildlife Diversity Program staff use Non-game
Wildlife Fund checkoff donations to apply for matching federal funds,
which multiplies the dollars used for all non-game programs. Last year
approximately two-percent of Oregon taxpayers donated a total of
$117,000 to the fund.
"One of our key goals is to prevent sensitive species from becoming
threatened or endangered. If we can do that, it's less costly in the
long run and everyone benefits," said Martin Nugent, Wildlife Diversity
Program manager. "Checkoff funds can help us put resources in the field,
apply for matching federal funds and work with our many wildlife
conservation partners to accomplish this goal."
For more information, visit the ODFW Web site at www.dfw.state.or.us,
or contact any local ODFW office.