Together with its partners, the Fund has conserved more than 155,000 acres of Maryland’s most important wetlands, farmlands, and working forests—from the Chesapeake Bay to Catoctin Mountain—to benefit wildlife, outdoor enthusiasts, and local economies.
We've worked for more than a decade to help the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) acquire lands for Blackwater. But conservation at Blackwater is about more than just protecting land, we're also helping restore the land to its native, natural state. Learn more >>
In 2010, The Fund released a new book, A Sustainable Chesapeake: Better Models for Conservation, as a conservation resource for government agencies, community groups, businesses and others involved in the restoration of the Chesapeake Bay.
A Sustainable Chesapeake profiles promising conservation practices and technologies and describes the protection of critical land and water resources in a series of 31 case studies that feature the work of government and private organizations and conservation leaders throughout the Bay watershed.
The book can be downloaded for free in its entirety, by chapter, or by case study. Click here for downloads.
Since the Captain John Smith Chesapeake National Historic Trail was established in 2006, visitors have been able to relive Smith’s historic voyages. Soon, modern-day explorers will be able to more fully follow in the captain’s footsteps. Together with the state of Maryland, in 2008 we protected a 350-acre swath of forestland skirting Maryland’s Wicomico River. The property is considered the trail’s first primitive camping site. To date, we and our partners have preserved more than 147,000 acres of valued landscapes across the state.
Through Maryland’s GreenPrint Program, the Fund acquired more than 500 acres near Cunningham Falls State Park, just north of Catoctin Mountain National Park and close to Camp David. The Town of Emmitsburg will manage the site to protect water quality and the scenic integrity of this historic area while the Catoctin Land Trust and Maryland Environmental Trust hold a conservation easement on the property.
Thanks in part to support from Richard King Mellon Foundation, the salt marshes of southeastern Maryland’s Deal Island Wildlife Management Area serve as a winter haven for blue-winged teal, pintails and wigeons, and a year-round home for blue crab. In 2005, along with the state’s department of natural resources, we secured a conservation easement on 444 acres of coastal forests and marshland along Deal Island’s Saint Peter’s Creek and Butler’s Cove.
Along the sheltered bays of Maryland’s Atlantic coastline, farms, forests, and fisheries have long sustained local communities. In recent years, however, the Coastal Bays region has been losing ground to development and rapid population growth. As a lead partner in Maryland’s Rural Legacy Program, we are working with local communities and landowners to protect sensitive shoreline, wildlife habitat, and the agricultural way of life on fragile coastal bay lands.
Thus far the successful partnership has protected 12,864 acres of working landscapes, sensitive shorelines and wildlife habitat, including 16 miles of coastline along Chincoteague Bay. Along the Nanticoke River and the state’s fragile coastal bays, we are preserving sensitive shoreline, wildlife habitat and an agricultural way of life. The successful partnership has resulted in the protection of more than 8,500 acres of working farms and forests in the Nanticoke River area.