Round River is rooted in the American West. Our efforts have spanned from Montana to Arizona, and we have worked to steward the last remaining large wilderness landscapes in the United States since 1991. We have run student programs in Arizona and Wyoming, led wolverine research in Idaho, and supported large-scale conservation planning in southern Utah. This includes the development of Diné Bikéyah Conservation Plan– the Utah Navajo’s conservation vision, which was ultimately adopted by the Bears Ears Inter-Tribal Coalition to serve as a successful National Monument Proposal.
We continue to partner with like-minded organizations and communities in the US, supporting conservation research and planning that works for large, complex social-ecological systems.
Recent efforts include research and monitoring support for the Sky Island Alliance, monitoring wildlife movement across the US-Mexico border, surveying perennial streams, and restoring local ecosystems.
We have partnered with Native American Tribes and local communities throughout the United States and have linked our projects to the concerns, perspectives, and priorities of communities accross the Mountain West. This includes several on-the-ground community initiatives in Indigenous communities, seeking to further their lands-based visions.
Round River is rooted in the American West. Our efforts have spanned from Montana to Arizona, and we have worked to steward the last remaining large wilderness landscapes in the United States since 1991. We have run student programs in Arizona and Wyoming, led wolverine research in Idaho, and supported large-scale conservation planning in southern Utah. This includes the development of Diné Bikéyah Conservation Plan– the Utah Navajo’s conservation vision, which was ultimately adopted by the Bears Ears Coalition to serve as a National Monument Proposal.
We continue to partner with like-minded organizations and communities in the US, supporting conservation research and planning that works for large, complex social-ecological systems.
Recent efforts include research and monitoring support for the Sky Island Alliance, monitoring wildlife movement across the US-Mexico border, surveying perennial streams, and restoring local ecosystems.
We have partnered with Native American Tribes and local communities throughout the United States and have linked our projects to the concerns, perspectives, and priorities of communities throughout the Mountain West. This includes several on-the-ground community initiatives in Indigenous communities, seeking to further their lands-based visions.
We support the Sky Island Alliance, working in the Sonoran Desert on the US-Mexico border. Our student programs help to advance ongoing initiatives that seek to monitor and conserve transboundary wildlife that rely on this landscape. Activities include camera trap monitoring of wildlife movement between the United States and Mexico, and surveying of perennial springs in water scarce locations.
We are thrilled to partner with Sky Island Alliance to offer a program that brings us closer to home. Experience the wide-open spaces of the Borderlands where students camp, research, and study in the rugged transboundary Madrean Archipelago of southern Arizona and northern Mexico.
We use cookies to improve your experience on our site. By using our site, you consent to cookies.
Websites store cookies to enhance functionality and personalise your experience. You can manage your preferences, but blocking some cookies may impact site performance and services.
Essential cookies enable basic functions and are necessary for the proper function of the website.
These cookies are needed for adding comments on this website.
Google reCAPTCHA helps protect websites from spam and abuse by verifying user interactions through challenges.
Statistics cookies collect information anonymously. This information helps us understand how visitors use our website.
Google Analytics is a powerful tool that tracks and analyzes website traffic for informed marketing decisions.
Service URL: policies.google.com