What to Do Now
Some ideas for those wondering how to get started in conservation — or how to keep going.
Originally published in Conservation Works by Michelle Nijhuis.
Earlier this month, I visited Eckerd College in St. Petersburg, Florida, where I talked about my book Beloved Beasts and the past and future of conservation. Eckerd is known for its programs in marine biology and environmental studies, and it was a joy to meet so many students engaged in the problems of conservation. It was also a fateful day; between my morning and evening talks, Charlie Kirk was murdered in Utah, and when I returned to the podium the questions from students felt even more urgent — to me and, I imagine, to them as well.
Many asked what they should, or could, do now. They weren’t necessarily asking for career advice, though many expected to have careers in conservation. They wanted to know how they could help stop or reverse the environmental losses they’d already witnessed. I gave a few different versions of my standard answer, which is to start doing something you know to be useful and find others to do it with. In the days since, I’ve been thinking more about what’s worked for me, and what I’ve seen work for others, as we’ve tried to further conservation. What follows is for the students I met at Eckerd, and for any conservationist wondering what to do next.
Start in your place. This is especially important, I think, if you’ve learned a lot of conservation theory but haven’t had a chance to put it into practice. No matter where you live, figuring out how to do conservation in your neighborhood will teach you a lot about the complexities of conservation in general, and you’ll be able to apply those lessons at a larger scale, in another place, or right where you are. Working locally and at a small scale is also likely to yield visible results, which can keep you going when you’re getting started and are most impatient for change.
Find out who knows what, who’s doing what, and who needs what. Even if you live in the middle of a city, you’re surrounded by other species’ habitats — and by people who know those habitats well and are working to protect, steward, and restore them. (If you can’t imagine that animals really depend on your place, or that anyone else cares about it, read A Natural History of Empty Lots.) Ask questions: who lived in this place first, human and non-human, and who lives here now? How has it changed, and how is it changing? Who depends on it, who enjoys it, who governs it, and who or what threatens its inhabitants? Who’s working on its behalf, and what do they need that you can provide? You might be needed to join a protest, plant seedlings, or write a grant proposal. Whatever’s needed will likely lead you to the next useful thing, and to more people to do it with.
Look for people working across divisions. Conservation is necessarily about blocking harm, but moving conservation forward requires bridging and building, too — finding points of agreement among people who vote differently or live differently and trying to expand that common ground. This kind of work is usually happening offline, far from the headlines: the board members of my local soil and water conservation district, for instance, almost certainly didn’t vote for the same candidate in the last presidential election, but every month they get together to discuss the habitat restoration projects the district supports. At a time when real dialogue is so often silenced by yelling or insults or worse, such collegial, purposeful discussions are not only refreshingly effective but just about the cheapest therapy you can find.
Resist the pleasures of doom. Doom is so tempting! And there are times when it seems very close at hand. I remind myself that none of us knows the end of our collective story. Plenty of conservationists worked through times of crisis — the world wars, the Dust Bowl, any number of plagues — that, to them, must have seemed like the end of the world. They may not have been optimistic during those times, but they believed they could still make things better, and many of them did. We can do the same.
Don’t wait on hope. While maintaining some faith in the future and your fellow humans is important, I find hope to be an unreliable motivator. I lose hope a dozen times a day! (Usually momentarily, but still.) Determination, love, and a sense of obligation — to place, people, or both — seem to sustain conservationists over the long run. And conservation is almost always a long run. When my own determination falters, I often return to a line that Aldo Leopold, in an unusually dark mood, wrote to a friend: “That the situation is hopeless should not prevent us from doing our best.” No matter how we see the odds, the living world deserves no less.
- I had the bittersweet pleasure of staying up late on Wednesday night to think about Jane Goodall for The Atlantic (gift link). She was a moral compass for conservation worldwide, and a wise, gentle, wonderfully irreverent voice for all that really matters.
- A new article in Bioscience argues for a “guardians and gardeners” approach to the U.S. landscapes legally designated as wilderness. For more on the ever-evolving idea of wilderness, check out “Untrammeled,” a terrific High Country News story by Marissa Ortega-Welch, and Marissa’s equally terrific podcast .
- The International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Species Survival Commission has specialist groups for flamingos, crustaceans, eels, wild tulips, and dozens of other species assemblages; last month, it finally established a specialist group for microbial communities, whose disruption is both a cause and effect of climate change. Kent Redford, reliably one of the most interesting thinkers in conservation, proposed in a 2023 editorial in Conservation Biology that the IUCN “build interest and capacity in microbes” as part of its species and ecosystem work.
- “Between Moon Tides,” a short documentary from the Guardian, follows conservationist Deirdre Robinson and her team as they struggle to save saltmarsh sparrow chicks from rising sea levels. An excellent example of what to do now.
- Thanks to Rhett Butler, founder of Mongabay, for so clearly articulating the mission of journalism in general and conservation journalism in particular. “Journalism is a catalyst, not a cure,” he writes. “It nudges complex systems by making facts hard to ignore and lies expensive to maintain.”
Finally, have you heard about “ The Great Moose Migration,” a livestream available on Swedish TV? A new paper finds that the immersive, real-time footage fosters “emotional connectedness and ecological curiosity” and may be especially valuable to those with limited access to nature. 🫎
Michelle Nijhuis is a longtime conservation and environmental journalist and the author of the book Beloved Beasts: Fighting for Life in an Age of Extinction, a critical history of the modern conservation movement. She is also a longtime contributing editor of High Country News and the lead editor of its “Conservation Beyond Boundaries” series. In Conservation Works, she writes about what’s working (and what’s not) in conservation today, shares new findings from research and on-the-ground experiences, and reflects on where conservation has been and where it’s going.
Nicole Roberts is the Associate Editor for PAN Works and provided editorial support for this essay.
Please visit PAN Works for more about our work on ethics and animal wellbeing.
