Arizona Wildlife Federation
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Arizona Wildlife Federation
Arizona's wildlife are facing more threats than ever, from increased development, habitat loss, climate change, and more. It's our mission to ensure that wildlife have the protections they need. We must continue to protect access to our public lands and promote the conservation of wildlife habitats.

That requires bold ideas and actions along with science-backed information. Ensuring our state's wildlife can continue to thrive means we must address climate change. As Arizona's climate continues to warm and drought persists, we help wildlife through legislation and direct action projects.
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About AWF
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The Arizona Wildlife Federation is dedicated to educating, inspiring, and assisting individuals and organization to value, conserve, enhance, manage, and protect wildlife and wildlife habitat. We believe Arizona's wildlife and public lands define our state and provide our families with world class recreation opportunities.
Wildlife
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As our state's population grows, so too do our roads, communities, fence lines, pollution, effects and more. Our wildlife is getting closed in, the migration corridors critical to their health are getting cut off, and their habitats are degrading.

Animals such as mule deer, elk, and pronghorn are more and more obstructed from their historic ranges and the areas they need for safe food, water, shelter, and breeding - threatening their long term survival and an important part of Arizona's way of life.
Public Lands
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Our public lands have a myriad of resources, the use and management of which provide jobs that drive our economy. This includes energy development, logging, grazing, agriculture, and outdoor recreation. Our public lands are also home to a diverse array of wildlife. In the past, the uses of our public lands have not always been balanced with the needs of the wildlife that rely on them.
Climate Change
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Many outdoors people, including hunters, anglers, hikers, and bikers have seen the effects of climate change on Arizona with their own eyes. Family-favorite places have been lost to wildfires, rivers and streams diminished due to drought, and each year, more supplemental water is needed to support many of our wildlife populations.
Education Programs
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BOW is a hands-on workshop for women 18 and older at all experience levels and fitness levels. Participants learn skills such as gun safety, shooting, angling, camping, Dutch-oven cooking, map and compass reading, rappelling, geocaching, and marksmanship with rifle and bow. BOW workshops build confidence for outdoor skills and camaraderie with fun and safe experiences.
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