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NATIONAL WILDLIFE COOPERATIVE

THE MISSING lINK

"Our Mission at National Wildlife Cooperative is to document and aid growth of wildlife cooperatives across the United States - Cooperatives focused on any form of wildlife or habitat management."

 

In 2008, at the age of 12, I started my first Quality Deer Management (QDM) Cooperative. Our family farm was only 30-acres, and at the time we didn't see any mature whitetails. After scouring the internet for every resource and obtaining some guidance from the Quality Deer Management Association (QDMA), I set out to talk to my neighbors about their deer management goals. Slowly, our co-op grew, one neighbor and one year at a time. By 2019, a decade later, this cooperative spanned over 1200 acres, and encompassed 10 properties used by hunters, landowners, and even hunting clubs.

 

Simultaneously, as a masters student at the University of Georgia, I conducted research for the United States Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) in partnership with the QDMA. This research ignited my interest in private landowner wildlife cooperatives. Over the course of two years (2016-2018), I surveyed and sampled over 45 Deer Management Cooperatives (DMCs) in five states (Georgia, Missouri, Michigan, New York, and Texas), that spanned over 600k acres and comprised over 2,800 hunter/members.

 

During this research, we discovered one of the most glaring problems with private landowner cooperatives across the national landscape: no national coordination, no national database, no national map, and a lack of national guidance on how to form and maintain co-ops. These cooperatives are local landowners working off handshake agreements for the betterment of wildlife management on their property. They can go undetected, unformalized, and have gone under appreciated by the wildlife conservation community for decades. Conservation organizations urge their members to form "co-ops" to accomplish management goals, but they provide minimal guidance after providing the initial idea of forming a co-op. This guidance then falls on the co-op leaders who work locally and independently, in most cases with no help from conservation organizations or their state wildlife officials, constantly trying to keep their group engaged.

 

I can't tell you how many times I would call co-op leaders just for them to say, "Thank you for doing this research, thank you for highlighting what we are doing! I am glad we are finally getting noticed", followed by, "My buddy has a co-op down the road, here is his contact info. He would love to talk to you, pick your brain, and be involved." To my surprise, no one (beside this co-op leader) knew about the existence of this other wildlife co-op -- not the state wildlife agencies (with a few exceptions), and not the conservation organizations that tout private landowner co-ops as a key tool in the future of wildlife management and landscape conservation. These grassroots wildlife managers now have an outlet that will help them, connect them, and be with them along this journey in their local communities just as much as they are inside of state or federal capitol buildings.

 

Simply, that is why I helped spearhead a group of diverse wildlife professionals that have their ear to the ground to formalize the National Wildlife Cooperative project. This project provides a platform for co-op leaders to use for cooperative centric articles, advice, and soon be a place to store their co-op information interactively. This is a platform built by co-op members and believers, for the co-op member, to highlight and promote co-ops across the United States - a place that provides cooperatives information, guidance, coordination, consultation, and a conservation data hub on a co-op by co-op basis. In this manner, we can quantify what hunters, habitat managers, and wildlife enthusiasts are providing for wildlife through voluntary landowner conservation partnerships. Ultimately giving you, the landowner and hunter, a national voice based on your local grassroots impact.

 

We look forward to this journey while working with our volunteer industry partners to provide co-op centric articles by the most respected names in co-ops and wildlife habitat through a quality platform for co-ops of all backgrounds (deer, turkey, quail, pollinators, etc.). This joint project will allow for co-ops to grow, connect, and aid national conservation efforts - one acre and co-op at a time!

 

About the Author:

 

 

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Hunter Pruitt, AWB 
Founder / 404.313.0885 hpruitt@nationalwildlifecoop.com

National Wildlife Co-operative
www.nationalwildlifecoop.com

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