Our Alaska. - The Nature Conservancy
Transcription
Our Alaska. - The Nature Conservancy
Annual Report 2015 OUR ALASKA It’s mid-summer on a quiet beach in Prince William Sound… I’m the first out of the tent, careful not to wake the others. I’m thinking about coffee and the chance to sit and watch the tide shift and the sea come to life. But before I can take a sip, my daughter, Névé, bursts out of the tent and is marching toward me. “C’mon Papa,” she says, her feet crunching on the beach gravel. “We’re going fishing.” Névé saw fins cutting through the shallows and knew it was the perfect time to fish. With fishing — as is the case with much in life — timing is everything. And so it is with our conservation work in Alaska. There has never been a better time to unleash the full potential of The Nature Conservancy’s practical approach to conservation. We’ve already come so far: In nearly 30 years of working here, we’ve built trust and earned the respect of many diverse Alaskans. We’ve dramatically improved understanding of which lands and waters are important and why. We’ve protected and restored places where people have found sustenance of one kind or another for millennia. And yet, I often feel like our work is just beginning. The world is changing and with that change we find new challenges and new BY THE NUMBERS opportunities. Thanks to the generous support of donors like you, we’re bringing innovative solutions to conservation, as you’ll see in this annual report, Our Alaska. We’re scaling up our efforts, creating new approaches with our partners and leveraging our collective investments to amplify our results across the state. The magnitude of the challenges now before us demands this strategy and purpose — and it demands commitment like yours, for which we’re grateful. As for the fishing on that calm summer morning, Névé was right. The fish were biting. In a perfect alliance, I cast the line and she reeled it in. A salmon went into our cooler and a couple of Dolly Varden went into a pan. That morning, we were reminded that for many in Alaska, the distance between nature and the table is far shorter than a trip to the supermarket. At the Conservancy we understand the fate of nature and the fate of people are tightly bound. And this is why we strive, in all that we do, to find new ways for nature and people to thrive together in Alaska — our Alaska. Thank you for helping protect this amazing place that gives so much to all of us. Our Alaska 12,000 rivers 3 million lakes 365 million acres 43,750 miles of coastline 30,000 brown bears 175,000 moose 736,732 people 95 percent of U.S. wild Pacific salmon commercial catch (2013) 78,500 people employed by the seafood industry $1 billion generated by salmon fishing in Southeast Alaska (2007) $3.4 billion spent on hunting and wildlife viewing in Alaska (2011) Our Work 22 staff, 26 trustees and 2,530 supporters 65 partners helped us accomplish lasting conservation in Alaska 28,570 new stream miles were mapped in the Mat-Su, helping land managers make salmon-friendly decisions 36 entrepreneurs attended our business boot camp for environmental sustainability in Southeast Alaska 26 additional stream miles received legal protections after being added to the state’s Anadromous Waters Catalog $1.25 million invested by the Conservancy in the Haa Aaní Community Development Fund, which makes loans available to sustainable Southeast Alaska businesses RAND HAGENSTEIN, ALASKA STATE DIRECTOR 1 Creating solutions for the challenges of our time NATURE HOW WE USE THE EARTH’S RESOURCES ACTION AMONG MANY KNOWING WHERE THE FISH WILL BE Building a salmon toolbox for conservation Christine Woll plays hockey. When she’s on the ice, she knows her job: Anticipate where the puck will be and make great plays. As a fisheries ecologist for The Nature Conservancy, her day job makes a similar demand of her: Anticipate where the salmon will be, then make the best conservation decisions. “Alaska constantly surprises, inspires, supports and sustains us in ways that are intimately connected to the healthy ecosystems we work to protect. We should never forget the stewardship responsibility we all share to enable future generations to enjoy this remarkable place, too.” FRAN ULMER, CHAIR OF THE U.S. ARCTIC RESEARCH COMMISSION AND A MEMBER OF THE GLOBAL BOARD OF DIRECTORS FOR THE NATURE CONSERVANCY CHRISTINE WOLL FRAN ULMER “Salmon are important to Yup’ik people. They are one of our spirit foods. I work with The Nature Conservancy because I care about my traditional food supply.” DANIEL CHYTHLOOK, A TRADITIONAL BRISTOL BAY SUBSISTENCE FISHERMAN AND MEMBER OF THE CONSERVANCY’S BRISTOL BAY SALMON SCIENCE FIELD CREW 2 “I know this may sound like an impossible task. I mean, to look at a huge chunk of Alaska and say, ‘this is where wild salmon are going to spawn, and we know they’ll use these streams over here as nurseries when they’re young.’ Yes, that’s daunting, but vital.” In Alaska, people rely on salmon for their food, income and recreation. Yet only 50 percent of salmon streams have been inventoried. The call to know which streams support salmon is urgent. So from her fieldwork in places like the remote headwaters of Bristol Bay — home to the largest runs of wild salmon on Earth — and the Matanuska and Susitna rivers, she gathers data to build complex computer models to answer burning questions: Which streams do salmon use and which are the greatest priorities for protection? “My role as a scientist is to take everything we’ve learned in the field and punch that into a model built expressly for this purpose. It allows us to know where the fish will be with a high degree of certainty.” Christine’s research unleashes a wealth of knowledge. In fact, it already has protected salmon streams. Local partners in Bristol Bay — including tribes and commercial fishermen — created a new land use plan with the Conservancy’s help, which resulted in a dramatic increase in state land classified for wildlife habitat or recreation. “It simply would be unrealistic — and costly — to do this work relying only on field surveys,” says Rand Hagenstein, Alaska state director. “Christine’s work combines the best of traditional research with the best of today’s technology. She’s building a salmon toolbox to fast-track conservation.” 3 FORECASTING SALMON FUTURES Predicting how climate change will impact our streams To see the future, says Conservancy scientist Colin Shanley, you first look to the past. And so when he wanted to learn what climate change means for the salmon streams of Southeast Alaska, he uncovered four decades of old government records on the water flows of 41 streams across the vast Tongass rainforest. With those records in hand, he built computer models forecasting how a future world will differ from the one we know today: Warmer and wetter weather in Southeast Alaska is predicted to change the flow of streams that salmon return home to spawn in each year. Colin’s findings were a wakeup call for Alaska. Nature runs on salmon in Alaska and people listen when salmon are on the line. “The fish that depend on these streams are an invaluable keystone species as well as absolutely crucial to our economy and the Alaska way of life,” Colin says. The Conservancy’s climate research helps set strategic conservation priorities in the Tongass: The healthiest streams will fare the best, and this makes our work to protect and restore streams now more important than ever. GUIDING GROWTH IN THE MAT-SU Mapping streams protects salmon nurseries The mighty Matanuska and Susitna rivers are at the heart of a place where open spaces, farming and salmon are a part of life. These glacial-fed rivers inspire an Alaskan lifestyle that continues to draw newcomers. Yet the unprecedented surge in new housing developments, shopping centers and roads has taken a toll on the Matanuska-Susitna’s beloved salmon runs. Even worse, many of the Mat-Su’s salmon streams didn’t appear on the maps. In a place like the Mat-Su, this was a problem. A single road crossing, if not done correctly, could block off many miles of small capillary streams that serve as nurseries for fish still too young to migrate to the sea. ALASKA’S GLOBAL IMPACT THE VALUE OF NATURE Smart development through science Protecting the Mat-Su’s best assets The ancient forests of the Tongass, the clear, productive streams and rivers of Bristol Bay and the vast wilderness of the Arctic — these iconic Alaskan landscapes provide many of Earth’s best opportunities for addressing global issues like climate change and the loss of vital lands and waters for healthy populations of wild salmon, polar bears and caribou. The Matanuska-Susitna Basin is one of the fastest growing areas in the United States. At its current rate, the borough could house 30 percent of Alaska’s population by 2050. But the very things that make the Mat-Su a great place to live — its many lakes, streams, open spaces and farmland — are now threatened by this explosive growth. As part of an international organization, the Alaska Program not only plays a critical role in global conservation, it also has the ability to apply some of the Conservancy’s most successful approaches to our work. In the Mat-Su we’re working to transform the way residents, land managers and businesses approach development. Our scientists are using the economics of nature to encourage residents and local leaders to incorporate the value of lands and waters in their future decisions. In the Arctic we are exploring how to apply the Conservancy’s experience in “smart development,” which enables companies, governments and communities to make better decisions about where development could occur — and where it shouldn’t. Through our own “Development by Design,” used in places like Wyoming and Mongolia, we can provide insight into what development does to natural systems and the people and species that depend upon them. Using lessons learned around the world, we hope to demonstrate how to lessen and offset the impacts of change by building the science, partnerships and policy support for better decisions. $10 million Amount generated each year by sportfishing activities in each of three popular Mat-Su watersheds. Almost a dozen other watersheds each generate $1 million per year. 37 percent Portion of Mat-Su property values attributed to lakes, streams and open space. 70 percent Increase in property values attributed to streamside locations in the Mat-Su. $35 billion Benefits provided to the global economy each year by nature in the Mat-Su, including flood risk reduction, water filtration and carbon sequestration. Thanks to a partnership led by The Nature Conservancy, that’s changed. By applying the latest technology, the partnership has brought the region’s maps up to national standards, a first for Alaska. And those maps reveal nearly 53,000 miles of streams, more than twice what was thought. We’re pleased to say that from this point forward, all our efforts to live with wild salmon — and protect the streams they need — have a clear map to follow. 4 5 THE TONGASS TRANSITION Creating solutions for nature, people and economies across the Emerald Edge Southeast Alaska’s Tongass National Forest forms the northern rim of a spectacular region we call the Emerald Edge. Stretching south from the 17 million-acre Tongass, through Canada’s coastal British Columbia and the Great Bear Rainforest, to the Olympic Peninsula of Washington State, Emerald Edge is the largest intact coastal rainforest remaining in the world. The people within this 100 million-acre band of old-growth forest and ocean have long relied on its lands and waters for their livelihoods. But large-scale resource development has taken a toll on the region and its incredible diversity of fish and wildlife has suffered. Over the years, economic development has been pitted against the environment in a battle with no winners. At The Nature Conservancy, we believe it’s time to replace short-term thinking with long-term solutions that work for people and nature. We’re scaling up our efforts and sharing resources across the entire Emerald Edge to engage communities in stewardship of their lands and waters, creating new opportunities for economic development and using science to find compromise. Our goal is a triple win where everyone thrives: nature, people and economies. Our work in the Tongass represents the best of the Conservancy’s efforts over the last decade to protect this haven for bears, wolves, salmon, otters and whales. Our goal is to transform how the forest is being managed through policy change and community stewardship, and inspire a new model of economic development. NATURE In 2005, The Nature Conservancy partnered with Audubon Alaska to assess the health of the Tongass. We created a comprehensive map of the forest, analyzed the timber supply and determined the best habitat for fish and wildlife. This work highlighted the most important salmon watersheds and identified where restoration could do the most good. In 2006, we launched the Tongass Futures Roundtable to bring stakeholders together to find practical solutions for industry, the Forest Service, communities and conservation. Our science and the Roundtable led to the Tongass Transition, a commitment by the U.S. Forest Service in 2010 to shift management of the Tongass from old-growth timber to the harvest of young-growth trees, restoration of forests and streams, and the creation of jobs in renewable energy, mariculture, fishing and tourism. In 2014 the Forest Service created the Tongass Advisory Committee. Comprised of industry, community and conservation stakeholders – including a Conservancy staff member – it was charged with recommending changes to the Tongass Land Management Plan. The committee’s recommendations are fully incorporated in the recently released draft of the plan, paving the way for an orderly transition from oldgrowth logging to a second-growth economy. PEOPLE ECONOMIES We are a founding member of the Sustainable Southeast Partnership, which works with Southeast communities to develop social, economic and ecological prosperity through community-based projects and new business development. We are committed to supporting a new, sustainable economy in Southeast. That’s why we’re partnering with Haa Aaní on a Community Development Fund to invest in new business ideas that align with our conservation goals. To date, we’ve raised $1.25 million for the fund. Thanks to a collaboration of local and regional partners, Hoonah’s traditional Guided by our 2005 assessment, we’ve invested $4 million in stream restoration projects, creating jobs for residents and improving habitat for the Tongass’s iconic salmon. lands are now a “Working Forest.” By providing cutting-edge science, the Conservancy is helping the community conserve the benefits provided by nature – like clean drinking water – while managing its resources to produce goods like wild edibles. Hoonah’s working forest will provide local jobs and result in healthier wildlife populations. Through the Emerald Edge program, we’re sponsoring learning exchanges between Indigenous leaders in Southeast Alaska, Washington and Canada to share best practices around resource stewardship and leadership. 6 In partnership with Haa Aaní we also created Path to Prosperity, a competition that awards three businesses a year with $40,000 to invest in their growth, and provides training to dozens of other entrepreneurs. Our staff is working closely with young-growth timber processors to identify markets for their products and create competitive strategies in this time of transition. 7 THE CONFLUENCE OF SCIENCE AND TRADITION BIRD’S EYE VIEW SCALING UP INSPIRATION Haida knowledge guides the next generation Coastal aerial images merge art and science Innovation makes a larger impact for nature Alaska’s 43,750 miles of coastline are among the most remote and rugged on the planet. But a scientific partnership managed by The Nature Conservancy has made them accessible to everyone – at least digitally. Because we are largely funded by private donations, The Nature Conservancy is mindful of how we spend our resources. We approach everything we do in terms of leverage and making the largest possible impact. We encourage innovation and opportunities to scale up and reapply successes in Alaska and beyond. We’ve found that the places where we engage can be proving grounds for bold new conservation solutions. Melanie isn’t far from home. In fact, this is home, though she’s never walked here before. It’s a cathedral rainforest of lush quiet, where she wades an unnamed creek that slides over stone and tumbles through tangles of spruce and cedar roots on its way to the sea. When her steps bring her to a pool where a fellow Haida crewmember set a live trap, she wades in deep to retrieve it. She pulls dozens of baby salmon from the trap, noting the species, and measuring the length of each in a waterproof notebook. Back at the tribal office of the Hydaburg Cooperative Association, she’ll type this into a computer database that offers the most comprehensive inventory ever assembled of wild salmon-bearing streams in the tribe’s traditional area. The meticulous work of Melanie’s crew is necessary because Alaska state law gives these waters special protections if science teams are able to document how at least one phase of the salmon life cycle depends on these streams. The leaders of Melanie’s tribe believe – as the Conservancy does – that places like these deserve the utmost care because this is where the cycle of life begins. And so the Conservancy and the tribe are working together to catalog the fish in the forest’s streams. After four field seasons and counting, they have protected 15 miles of salmon streams, surveyed a total of nearly 70 miles, and inspired momentum in the community. 8 Projects like these are at the leading edge of the Sustainable Southeast Partnership; a network of Native, government, business and non-profit leaders working together to create a model of community conservation and sustainability in the largest remaining temperate rainforest on the planet. It is an example of how joining forces to address the triple bottom line of the region’s communities – nature, people and economies – results in transformational change. Here on the Haida’s traditional lands, the Conservancy and Melanie’s crew work to safeguard the streams, because safeguarding the streams protects salmon and the Tongass ecosystem. Protecting salmon in turn preserves the livelihoods, traditions and culture of the people who live here. “It’s kind of like what our elders did,” Melanie says, recounting the stories of elders who kept close watch on salmon streams – sometimes putting logs or rocks just so – ensuring they were ready for salmon returning to spawn. In her fieldwork, Melanie’s devotion to her own Haida tradition and her scientific curiosity has found a perfect confluence. Just as the elders inspired her, she’s found inspiration in science, and a calling. She believes it’s her turn to share stories and her new scientific understanding of home. “I had so many mentors growing up. I know how they impacted my life,” she says. “Now, I want to mentor the kids. They are our future.” The Alaska ShoreZone program has captured video and photos of 85 percent of Alaska’s coast. It’s the fruit of long-term efforts to accurately catalog and create a trusted visual guide to Alaska’s shoreline. How? Scientists equipped with high-resolution still and video cameras fly the coastline in a helicopter traveling at an altitude of 300-1,000 feet. The images are paired with descriptive scientific details and then uploaded to shorezone.org for anyone to see and use. The data produced by ShoreZone has inspired a wide variety of uses: A marine biologist who monitors for signs of climate change in biologically rich beds of eelgrass in Bristol Bay; an emergency response crew dispatched to protect a sensitive estuary from an oil spill after a ship runs aground on a stormy night in the Bering Sea; and a ship captain leading a project to collect marine debris to protect marine mammals such as whales and sea lions from entanglements along the outer coast of the Kenai Peninsula. And because the uses of ShoreZone imagery are limited only by the imagination, the list of its remarkable usefulness only continues to grow. Hoonah Native Community Forest The ambitious Prince of Wales Island Native Forest Lands Partnership is a scaled-up version of the Hoonah Native Community Forest. These programs focus on creating local jobs and restoring forests and streams in tribal traditional use areas. Path to Prosperity Our Path to Prosperity contest for sustainable entrepreneurship in Southeast Alaska inspired the Washington Coast Works business contest. Launched with our partner, Haa Aaní LLC, Path to Prosperity is helping to shape the economic future of the Tongass. Mat-Su stream mapping Our efforts to accurately map Mat-Su streams using the latest in high-tech won accolades for its efficient multi-agency partnership, which pooled funding and technical expertise to complete the job with considerable cost savings. It has inspired similar projects in the salmon-rich waters of the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta and Kenai Peninsula. 9 OUR SUPPORTERS Corporate Council on the Environment In Alaska, the environment is the economy. Thank you to the members of Alaska’s Corporate Council on the Environment, who believe that saving Alaska’s natural wealth of fish and wildlife is not only the right thing to do — it is one of the smartest investments they can make. Corporate Catalysts - $50,000+ ConocoPhillips Alaska Inc. OUR SUPPORTERS Legacy Club Corporate Leaders - $25,000+ Alaska Airlines and Horizon Air BP Petroleum News Corporate Partners - $1,000+ ABR Inc. Alaska Rubber & Supply Inc. Alaska Wildland Adventures Inc. Bristol Bay Native Corporation Calista Corporation Chugach Alaska Corporation CIRI Fairweather LLC Flint Hills Resources Icicle Seafoods Inc. LGL Alaska Research Associates Inc. Lynden Family of Companies Pacific Star Energy Stoel Rives LLP Trident Seafoods Corporation Udelhoven Oilfield System Services Inc. 10 The Legacy Club is a group of Nature Conservancy supporters who have chosen to leave a lasting legacy to conservation by making a life-income gift to the Conservancy or by naming the Conservancy as a beneficiary in their estate plans. The following individuals joined the Legacy Club in Alaska during fiscal year 2015. We thank our 204 Legacy Club members for their dedication to preserving Alaska’s natural resources for many generations to come. S. Edson Kara Hilwig Denby S. Lloyd “I like The Nature Conservancy’s non-confrontational approach and I love the fact that the Conservancy works with all groups without appearing heavy-handed. Like the Conservancy, I feel strongly about leaving a beautiful world for future generations.” Legacy Club member Sanna Green ventured north to teach in Alaska in 1956. Over the years she’s built a remote cabin, fished commercially in Bristol Bay and criss-crossed the state in her red-and-white Cessna 172. SANNA GREEN, LEGACY CLUB MEMBER Dawn Mendias Ellen M. Murphy-Welk Terzah Tippin Poe & Bob Poe Tima Priess Ann G. Rappoport Ken Russell & Laurel Devaney SUSAN RUDDY Michael C. T. Smith & Linda L. D. Smith Ms. Frances D. Victor “Alaskans are passionate about their precious places. The Nature Conservancy has built many effective partnerships based on that passion for place, and those partnerships have made positive and lasting differences for people and nature.” SUSAN RUDDY, CHAIR OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES FOR THE NATURE CONSERVANCY IN ALASKA AND LEGACY CLUB MEMBER 11 OUR SUPPORTERS Thank you The Nature Conservancy knows that people and nature can both thrive in Alaska. To all the donors who share our vision of a better future, we thank you. The following donors made gifts or pledges of $500 or more to programs or projects within the state of Alaska during fiscal year 2015 (July 1, 2014 to June 30, 2015). $1,000,000+ Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation $100,000 - $999,999 Anonymous (2) Estate of Mr. Richard O. Gantz Estate of Ms. Jeanne B. Moulds $50,000 - $99,999 Tim & Rhonda Snider Wallace Research Foundation $10,000 - $49,999 Anonymous (1) Eaglemere Foundation Ben & Ruth Hammett John Sheldon Bevins Memorial Foundation Bob & Martha Osborne Rasmuson Foundation Turner Foundation $5,000 - $9,999 Anonymous (2) Estate of John & Mary Claus Mr. Bradley A. Feld & Ms. Amy Batchelor Mr. Adam C. Gibbons & Mrs. Ingrid Gibbons Mr. John Hagey & Ms. Sonia Mazurek Mr. Kriss E. Hart Phil & Susan James Harry and Pat McDonald Ms. Susan Miller & Mr. Byron Grote Estate of Dr. Ruth A. M. Schmidt Ms. Nancy J. Waterman & Mr. William C. Leighty United Way of Anchorage 12 Pick.Click.Give. Thank you to all the Alaskans who helped protect nature by participating in Pick.Click.Give. This year, you can Pick.Click.Give. to show your love for Alaska and The Nature Conservancy when you apply for your PFD! $1,000 - $4,999 The American Endowment Foundation Anonymous (1) Marlow & Barbara Baar Joan L. Baxter Austin & Virginia Beutner Ms. Kathi Caldwell Ms. Janice Chen Jeff Clarke and Kris Ryan-Clarke Crabb-Grasseschi Family Foundation Mrs. Lucy P. Cutting Mr. Paul H. Daggett Ms. Lori Davey & Mr. Trent Davey Mrs. Sharon Davies Mr. Craig E. Dorman Ms. Leah Evans Mr. Matt Frankforter Ms. Elizabeth P. Graham Mr. Richard L. Hirsch Robert Hutton Mr. James Jansen Dr. Konrad C. Kaltenborn & Catherine Schumacher Mrs. Karen S. King Mr. Dave R. Klein Mark and Leslie Kroloff Ms. Ayako O. Kurihara Dr. Jeremy T. Larson The Leighty Foundation Mr. Thomas P. Lyngholm Ms. Barbara MacManus Mr. Michael A. Malachowski & Ms. Leslie M. Bialas McKinley Capital Management Mr. & Mrs. Dennis McMillian John & Rika Mouw Ms. Susan Olsen Melanie Baca Osborne Ms. Barbara L. Powell Mr. & Mrs. Richard Prentki Bob & Bobbie Ritchie Brian Rogers & Sherry Modrow Ms. Thelma Rome Ms. Grace B. Schaible Donald & Sherry Shiesl Mr. Jeffrey M. Spatz & Mrs. Paige Spatz Mrs. Susan M. Stempel Ms. Marianne Stillner Ronald & Mary Kay Teel Ken & Pat Thompson Mr. James E. Torgerson & Ms. Morgan B. Christen Mrs. Julia H. Triplehorn & Mr. Don M. Triplehorn Mr. & Mrs. David Trudgen Ms. Frances Ulmer Ms. Vicki Wyan $500 - $999 Merrideth Akers Ms. Elizabeth Allman Myron Angstman Mr. Murray P. Athans David & Joey Banks Cynthia Beckwith & Ryan Dutcher Carl S. & Ruth Benson BP Foundation Randal & Valerie Buckendorf Shauna Budge Ms. Catherine F. Cahill Judy Caminer Mr. John B. Chenoweth Denali National Park Wilderness Centers Ltd Joseph K. & Katherine S. Donohue Mr. Brad Gessner Ms. Sanna Green Mr. Jon K. Goltz Mr. Randall H. Hagenstein & Ms. Evie Witten Mr. Donald J. Hansen Mr. & Mrs. Henry P. Huntington Mary Janet Johnson Mr. & Mrs. James Kaufman Ms. Karen Kelleher Mr. Dan C. Ketchum Mrs. Linda L. Kumin Terry S. Lauck Mary C. MacFarlane Mr. Chester Mark Greg McCarthy & Wendy Chase Jo Ann Miller Steven Miller Thomas P. Miller Dr. Peter O. Mjos & Ms. Karen E. Ruud Mrs. Anna-Maria Mueller Ms. Ellen M. Murphy-Welk Ms. Kris Norosz Dr. Janice Onorato Marjorie & Brian Paust Joshua Peirce Terzah Tippin Poe & Bob Poe Dr. Terrance J. Quinn II Mr. & Mrs. Ray Robinson Dr. William J. Rome Ms. Susan L. Ruddy Jon R. Sallstrom Mr. Thomas E. Schulz Bruce & Diane P. Shellenbaum Ms. Janis Skliar Dr. Daniel D. Thomson & Ms. Ruth A. Thomson Mr. & Mrs. John G. R. Wolfe OUR ORGANIZATION FY 2015 TOTAL EXPENSES $4,177,092 ALASKA BOARD OF TRUSTEES Conservation Programs 70% Our Finances The Nature Conservancy in Alaska Fiscal year ending June 30, 2015 Support for TNC Work Outside Alaska 3% STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION Development 10% ASSETS Cash and Investments $7,486,893 Endowment Funds $294,512 Conservation Lands $3,157,363 Other Assets $870,414 Land and Stewardship 1% Operations 16% $11,809,182 LIABILITIES $3,216,212 NET ASSETS $8,592,970 Marketing & Communications 1% $11,809,182 OUR STAFF FY 2015 TOTAL REVENUE $4,765,572 “As a volunteer for The Nature Conservancy, you really get attached to some very special places. Alaska is one of those places for me where the Conservancy offers the right combination of science, solutions, and motivation to make the right things happen for people and nature.” PHIL JAMES OF FORT COLLINS, COLORADO, A CONSERVANCY DONOR AND A MEMBER OF ALASKA’S BOARD OF TRUSTEES Contributions 53% PHOTO CREDITS Grants and Contracts 27% Cover: Bob Waldrop; Inside Cover: Oscar Avellaneda-Cruz; Page 1: Bob Waldrop; Page 2: (Clockwise from top) Alaska ShoreZone Program, Erika Nortemann; Page 3: (Clockwise from top) Clark James Mishler, Jesse Coleman, Ami Vitale; Page 4: (Clockwise from top) Jason Ching; Alaska ShoreZone Program; Page 5: Bob Waldrop; Page 6-7: Erika Nortemann (3); Page 8: Erika Nortemann; Page 9: Alaska ShoreZone Program (2); Page 10: Bob Waldrop; Page 11: Bob Waldrop, Brooke Wood, Bob Waldrop; Page 13: Bob Waldrop, Erika Nortemann; Back Cover: Kathleen Patricia Turner, State of Alaska GRAPHIC DESIGN Nikita L. Pakhare Investments 2% Other 18% Susan L. Ruddy, Board Chair Melanie Baca Osborne, Vice Chair Robert Osborne, Vice Chair James Torgerson, Vice Chair Adam Gibbons, Treasurer Kris Norosz, Secretary Randal Buckendorf Anthony Christianson, Honorary Jeff Clarke Lori Davey Philip James Karen King David Klein, PhD Mark Kroloff Joseph Marushack Harry McDonald Peter Mjos, MD Stephen Murphy Terzah Tippin Poe H. Charles Price Brian Rogers Mary Sattler John Springsteen Stephen Trimble Bob Waldrop David Wight T. Henry Wilson Rand Hagenstein, Alaska Director Dave Albert, Director of Conservation Science Cynthia Beckwith, Director of Philanthropy Jean Carter, Grant Writer Norman Cohen, Southeast Alaska Program Manager Jai Crapella, Southeast Alaska Operations Coordinator James DePasquale, Spatial Ecologist Emily Doherty, Associate Director of Philanthropy Nicki Holmen, Financial Analyst Stephanie Holthaus, Associate Director of Philanthropy Kelly Ingram, Operations Coordinator Michael Kampnich, Prince of Wales Field Representative Hank Lentfer, Gustavus Preserve Steward Bridget Paule, Director of Operations Ann Rappoport, Director of Conservation Conor Reynolds, Conservation Forester Colin Shanley, Southeast Conservation Planner Corinne Smith, Mat-Su Basin Program Director Dustin Solberg, Marketing Specialist Jessica Speed, Conservation Coordinator Christine Woll, Spatial Ecologist Brooke Wood, Major Gifts Manager 13 The Nature Conservancy Alaska Program 715 L St. Suite 100 Anchorage, AK 99501 NON-PROFIT ORG US POSTAGE PAID SEATTLE, WA PERMIT #1320 (907) 865-5700 | alaska@tnc.org nature.org/alaska Our vision is a world where the diversity of life thrives, and people act to conserve nature for its own sake and its ability to fulfill our needs and enrich our lives. BYRON MALLOTT “The Nature Conservancy succeeds at bringing people together to forge solutions that work for Alaska.” BYRON MALLOTT, LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR OF THE STATE OF ALASKA AND FORMER MEMBER OF ALASKA’S BOARD OF TRUSTEES To support the Conservancy’s work in Alaska, use the enclosed envelope or make a gift online at nature.org/alaska facebook.com/natureconservancyalaska twitter.com/nature_ak This report is published by The Nature Conservancy in Alaska on paper made in the USA from 100% post-consumer recycled fiber instead of virgin wood fiber.