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August 29, 2024

Scenic autumn landscape in Colorado

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In The Arena: DeAnna Bublitz

TRCP’s “In the Arena” series highlights the individual voices of hunters and anglers who, as Theodore Roosevelt so famously said, strive valiantly in the worthy cause of conservation

DeAnna Bublitz

Hometown: Apple Valley, MN
Occupation: Microbiologist
Conservation credentials: DeAnna Bublitz is the founder of DEER Camp, a gear library for hunters based in Missoula, Montana.

DeAnna Bublitz grew up in Minnesota enjoying the many state parks and open farmland the North Star state has to offer. When she moved to Montana in 2012, Bublitz wanted to become more intentional and involved with her meat consumption. She asked a friend if they would loan her gear and show her the ropes of hunting. The rest is history. Since that influential first season, Bublitz has founded DEER Camp, an organization that aims to reduce some of the financial hurdles by providing a gear library for hunters. 

Here is her story.

My parents introduced me to the outdoors. They weren’t backpackers or anything, but we’d go car camping at various Minnesota state parks and on my grandparent’s farmland in Wisconsin. I grew up with a big backyard near a pond that let me perfect my frog-catching abilities. My parents also sent me to summer camps which were a major player in getting me into the outdoors. I learned to canoe and backpack at the Wolf Ridge Environmental Center in northern Minnesota, and this foundation led me to taking weeklong backpacking trips with friends along the Superior Hiking Trail in high school.  

Bublitz cutting up a Montana elk.

Hunting came later when I moved to Montana in 2012. After going trap shooting with my landlord (and realizing I wasn’t as terrible as I’d imagined I’d be) I wanted to see if I could be more intentional and involved with my meat consumption. So I reached out to my only friend here at the time, a friend I’d met ages ago at that same summer camp, to see if she and her husband would loan me gear and show me the ropes of hunting. And the rest is history. 

I think one of my most memorable outdoor adventures was my first solo backpacking trip. I go hunting alone quite a bit, but those are always day trips or maybe to a Forest Service cabin. But just a few years ago I finally did a longer backpacking trip just myself and my dog and it was wonderful. We did a 20-mile loop over three nights in southern Montana where I didn’t pass anyone on the trail until the last three miles. My campsite for two nights was in an elk wintering ground, and they had clearly only vacated recently because their tracks and scent were all over. It was beautiful and empowering to be in that vast of a landscape with no one but my dog. 

A Canadian or Alaskan moose hunt would be a dream. The landscape is just incredible so even if I didn’t get anything, I’d come away happy. And pulling a moose tag in Montana is a test of your patience and longevity.  

Bublitz works on a trail crew in Montana’s Scapegoat Wilderness.

Conservation enhances my outdoor life by making it possible. Generations of advocates came before me, and they are why the large tracts of land I recreate on are available to everyone. From Missoula-local trails like Mt. Sentinel and Mt. Jumbo, to the Scapegoat Wilderness, these spaces have been conserved for recreation and wildlife alike because of conservation-minded folks.  

From an early age it was instilled in me that we are all stewards of our surroundings, so being engaged with conservation issues was a natural course.

DeAnna Bublitz

One of the biggest conservation challenges in my area is development, which is maybe not what a lot of folks think about when they imagine Montana. But we have been growing population-wise for some time and the boom that came in the last few years has really put a crunch on housing. People aren’t moving here so they can live in denser cities; they want their private 20-acre ranchette on prime valley land or high up in the mountains, both options necessitating new driveways, roads, power lines, and fences. All which disrupt wildlife corridors. Wrapped up in development is every other issue you might think of facing conservation: more driving miles because folks still need to get groceries, go to the doctor, get their kids to school, and all of these activities lead to habitat fragmentation, introduction of noxious weeds, wildlife conflict, and changing attitudes of about land use, management, and access.  

Bublitz with her first deer, a mule deer buck.

From an early age it was instilled in me that we are all stewards of our surroundings, so being engaged with conservation issues was a natural course. The simplest reason I’m invested in conservation is that I use and love these outdoor spaces and by extension, I care for what lives there and want it to be healthy. But I also want these places to be available for other folks in the future to discover and fall in love with. And at least in Montana, it feels really easy to get involved and create community around conservation. In a very short time, I’ve made connections with so many regional and statewide nonprofits, I am on the Board of Directors for our local rod and gun club, and these connections and activities help me stay engaged and energized in a way that is long lasting and sustainable.

Most hunters and anglers I know aren’t just in it for the harvest, so while conservation should matter for simply ensuring healthy populations of these game animals, it’s about more than that. Hunting and fishing are ways to get into the outdoors and see new places, take photos of beautiful sunrises, and more often than not, see all manner of critters that aren’t the ones you’re actually looking for. Conservation work creates better habitat for the animals we hunt and fish and subsequently, healthier populations of those animals. The efforts put into conserving the habitats of game animals typically benefits all of the other organisms that exist in those same environments, but it also makes for healthy landscapes to soak in when you’re out there and untying your line from a tree or taking your rifle for walk.

Photos Courtesy of DeAnna Bublitz.


The TRCP is your resource for all things conservation. In our weekly Roosevelt Report, you’ll receive the latest news on emerging habitat threats, legislation and proposals on the move, public land access solutions we’re spearheading, and opportunities for hunters and anglers to take action. Sign up now.

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August 27, 2024

Interior Department Retains Safeguards on 28 Million Acres of Public Lands in Alaska

The department’s decision conserves valuable habitat for salmon, caribou, moose, and Dall sheep

Today, the Interior Department moved to maintain existing conservation safeguards on 28 million acres of public lands in Alaska, including large swaths of intact fish and wildlife habitat that offer world-class hunting and fishing opportunities.

The decision and the associated Public Land Order—which implements the Bureau of Land Management’s preferred action following a robust public process and environmental review—is good news for local subsistence harvesters and non-resident hunters and anglers who value rural Alaska’s undisturbed and unbroken habitat.

“We applaud the Bureau of Land Management and Interior Department’s actions to retain conservation measures that have stood for decades on these public lands in Alaska,” said Jen Leahy, Alaska senior program manager for the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership. “Hunters and anglers can continue enjoying these incredible public hunting and fishing grounds without wondering if these lands will be privatized and developed.”

The 28 million acres encompassed in the decision includes important winter range for the Western Arctic Caribou Herd, one of Alaska’s largest caribou herds, and renowned hunting and fishing habitat in other areas of the state, including Bristol Bay—home to the world’s most prolific sockeye salmon fishery—and moose country in the Yukon and Kuskokwim watersheds. Alaska’s “D-1” public lands are also adjacent to many celebrated and remote rivers that anglers and hunters enjoy floating.

Learn more about why these public lands are prized by hunters and anglers in our guest blog by Bjorn Dihle, a lifelong Alaskan and outdoorsman.


The TRCP is your resource for all things conservation. In our weekly Roosevelt Report, you’ll receive the latest news on emerging habitat threats, legislation and proposals on the move, public land access solutions we’re spearheading, and opportunities for hunters and anglers to take action. Sign up now.

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In New Mexico, and Across the Country, Migrating Big Game Herds Meet Roadblocks

The Land of Enchantment has a fresh opportunity in the upcoming 2025 legislative session to devote funds to keep drivers and wildlife safe

Driven by instinct and shaped by their environment, big game such as deer, elk, and pronghorn follow paths sometimes invisible to the human eye—passages deeply set in the landscape and etched in evolutionary memory—but often noticed by hunters. The need for animals to move is immutable, as species of every kind undertake journeys for habitat, food, and reproduction.

In New Mexico, as in other places across the West, migration corridors for big game and other animals alike are increasingly threatened. Poorly sited human infrastructure, like energy and housing development, can degrade habitat and disrupt wildlife movement in ways difficult to mitigate.

Roads are particularly troublesome. If you’ve ever driven the highways abutting forests and grasslands around New Mexico, you’ve likely seen evidence of this struggle in the remains of animals lying in broken piles beside the road.

A pair of New Mexico mule deer bucks rest on a hillside. (Photo credit: John Cornell)

Near where my wife and I live in northern New Mexico, motorists are likely to see a dead deer alongside Highway 550 on their way south to explore the San Pedro Parks Wilderness, and two more on their way home along the same road. Regular travelers along US-180 and NM-90 near Silver City, US-70 out of Ruidiso and the Sacramento Mountains, and I-25 over Glorieta Pass are likely to report similar sights: a regular occurrence of dead animals that attempted to cross a busy roadway.

On average, there are around 1,200 wildlife-vehicle collisions reported in New Mexico every year, costing about $20 million in vehicle damage, emergency response, and healthcare expenses. And that doesn’t include the incalculable damage to wildlife populations and hunter opportunity.

You Can’t Teach a Deer to Use a Crosswalk, But You Can Build a Bridge

Fortunately for wildlife, and the safety of New Mexico drivers, the collision hotspots mentioned above (and others like them) were identified in the state’s Wildlife Corridors Action Plan. Finalized in 2022, the plan provides comprehensive guidance to the New Mexico Department of Transportation and the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish to conserve areas important for wildlife movement and to develop road-crossing structures designed to help animals safely cross heavily trafficked highways. In turn, crossing structures also protect the public from dangerous, sometimes deadly, collisions with wildlife.

We don’t need to look far to see how beneficial investments in wildlife-crossing structures can be. Nearby states like Colorado and Utah have seen success in similar solutions. In Utah, the construction of two underpasses beneath I-15 saw a 98.5 percent reduction in deer mortalities for that corridor, and in Colorado, wildlife crossings above and below State Highway 9 have reduced collisions by 90 percent over five years.

We also have evidence of crossing infrastructure working right here at home. Near where I live in Aztec, the state installed three wildlife crossing culverts in 2004, primarily to encourage mule deer to travel below US 550. Between 2017 and 2020, camera monitoring conducted by AZGFD and NMDOT documented more than 6,000 successful mule deer crossings. That’s 6,000 fewer opportunities for a problem on the roadway above.

Above is an example of single-span overpass structure intended to bridge the existing four travel lanes and shoulders of US 550 with a 17-foot-tall vertical clearance and 150-foot width. Overpasses and their approach areas would be planted with vegetation that matches the natural habitat adjacent to the highway. (Photo credit: NMDOT)

No Money, More Problems

Incredible improvements like those mentioned above are possible for New Mexico’s wildlife and drivers, but only if we’re willing to pay for them. For just one of the collision hotspots (US 550 north of Cuba), the cost to develop all the recommended infrastructure—multiple crossing structures, fencing, and additional signage for drivers—is estimated to be $45 million. Statewide, an estimated $388 million is needed to address the eleven priority areas identified by NMDOT.

While modest investments have been made in recent years to implement the state’s action plan ($5 million in 2024), New Mexico has a fresh opportunity in the upcoming 2025 legislative session to more adequately devote funds to these critical, life-saving solutions. With the allocation of additional funding, the state can also leverage federal dollars from grants such as the Wildlife Crossings Pilot Program, which is designed to assist states in efforts to mitigate the more than 1 million wildlife-vehicle collisions that take place across the country every year. Leveraging federal money while the opportunity exists will be crucial if we’re to come close to meeting the large estimates in New Mexico’s state plan.

Absent robust funding, we’ll continue to see animals hitting these proverbial roadblocks around the state in alarming numbers, especially as new pressures on habitat limit the ability for wildlife to move freely. For hunters, investments in crossings infrastructure makes good sense, both in keeping us safer on the way to our hunt and in conserving the health of herds we’d like to enjoy well into the future.

As we’re in the middle of busy summer travel and approaching both hunting season and the next legislative session, sign up so you can stay tuned for ways to assist TRCP and our partners in securing substantive funding of the New Mexico Wildlife Corridors Action Plan.


The TRCP is your resource for all things conservation. In our weekly Roosevelt Report, you’ll receive the latest news on emerging habitat threats, legislation and proposals on the move, public land access solutions we’re spearheading, and opportunities for hunters and anglers to take action. Sign up now.

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August 23, 2024

TRCP Appreciates Compromise in Rock Springs Final Resource Management Plan 

Group acknowledges BLM and State effort to balance development and conservation 

Photo credit: Josh Metten

After nearly seven months of analyzing and addressing public comments, the Bureau of Land Management on Thursday published its Rock Springs proposed final Resource Management Plan.

The plan includes many of the conservation safeguards for the wildlife-rich Greater Little Mountain Area that were recommended by the Governor’s Task Force, as well as management direction for the Red Desert to Hoback mule deer migration that is consistent with the Governor’s Migration Corridor Executive Order.

“The BLM and Wyoming Game and Fish Department are crucial partners in managing the habitat and wildlife cherished by Wyomingites” said Josh Metten, Wyoming field manager for the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership. “Measures in the RMP to maintain migratory habitats and conserve the Greater Little Mountain Area are important for Wyoming sportspeople, and we appreciate changes made to address the feedback of local communities.”

At over 3.6 million acres, BLM lands in the Rock Springs Field Office support uses important to local communities, including wildlife and recreation, grazing, energy development, and mining. The revision, which has been underway since 2011, has been of high interest to conservation and development interests. Following the release of the draft RMP in 2023, the state formed a Task Force facilitated by the University of Wyoming’s Ruckelshaus Institute which developed a set of recommendations for the RMP. Changes to the final proposed RMP reflect the feedback provided to BLM through formal public comments and the Task Force recommendations.

“While sportspeople didn’t get everything we wanted, we’re happy to see conservation of some habitat and special places included in the proposed final plan,” said Metten. “TRCP looks forward to working with the BLM and local stakeholders to implement the plan once it is completed.”

The RMP revision process now enters a 60-day review period by the Governor’s office for consistency with state and local plans. Stakeholders who have previously participated in the process have 30 days to protest areas of the final plan. A record of decision is expected later this year.

HOW YOU CAN HELP

From now until January 1, 2025, every donation you make will be matched by a TRCP Board member up to $500,000 to sustain TRCP’s work that promotes wildlife habitat, our sporting traditions, and hunter & angler access. Together, dollar for dollar, stride for stride, we can all step into the arena of conservation.

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