Strength to Endure

The work of conservation never ends鈥攁nd neither does the perseverance of people who care.
Winding blue ponds and lakes weave through a mountain vista in Alaska.
Tongass National Forest in Yakutat, Alaska. Each spring, up to 200 bird species nest in or migrate through the area, which is threatened by new plans to open the forest for logging and mining. Photo: Sydney Walsh/约炮视频

In a 1940 issue of 约炮视频 magazine, Ira N. Gabrielson鈥攖he first director of the newly formed U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service鈥攎arveled for 10 long pages at the great concentrations of birdlife in Alaska. Three years and several trips later, his byline appeared again, this time pondering a question: What effect would new roads, airstrips, and encroaching development have on Alaska鈥檚 wildlife, and on the people who depend upon the land for their existence?

Gabrielson oversaw an expansion of the National Wildlife Refuge System across the United States, but it would be many more decades鈥攁nd many more 约炮视频 stories鈥攂efore Alaska saw robust protections through a combination of national refuges, forests, parks, and other designations. And yet here we are in 2025, once again examining the question he posed鈥攐nly with more urgency. As Alisa Opar and Andy McGlashen report in this issue, proposals to develop Alaska鈥檚 irreplaceable ecosystems are gaining momentum, including roads that would open key migratory bird habitats to development.

If history has shown us anything, it鈥檚 that progress takes vigilance to maintain.

Early 约炮视频 members pressed for the first national wildlife refuge, Florida鈥檚 Pelican Island, in 1903, and even paid the salary of the first manager (it was $7 a month). Over its 120-year history, the national organization secured many more conservation wins, but if history has shown us anything, it鈥檚 that progress takes vigilance to maintain. The vibrant seabird colonies making Johnston Atoll home, as Tristan Spinski and Jenny McKee illustrate in this issue鈥檚 opening photo essay, reflect dogged efforts to rid the island of invasive ants. And the Great Lakes鈥 small but mighty Piping Plovers are thanks to tireless crews who band, monitor, and rear baby birds.

The staff who provide key services for the nation鈥檚 public lands鈥攂iologists, park rangers, land managers, and others鈥攑lay an integral role in these and other efforts. And so it鈥檚 with concern that we also share Maddie Burakoff鈥檚 story on how the deep cuts to the federal workforce are now compromising agencies鈥 ability to fulfill their missions. The careful reader will see these cuts playing out across multiple stories in this issue.

Gabrielson once wrote that 鈥減ersistency in the conservation movement is essential,鈥 and that preserving its successes will require education and public pressure 鈥渇or all time to come.鈥 Thankfully, the scientists, birders, local leaders, and others who care enough to speak out for our natural resources show no signs of letting up. 

This piece originally ran in the Summer 2025 issue. To receive our print magazine, become a member by .