Mass Audubon protects more than 34,000 acres through a statewide sanctuary system stretching from Berkshire County to Worcester; from Attleboro to Cape Cod and the Islands; and from Boston to Newburyport. Overall, our sanctuaries feature more than 100 miles of nature trails, serve as outdoor classrooms to tens of thousands of schoolchildren, and receive hundreds of thousands of visitors annually. Our statewide network of wildlife sanctuaries, located in 90 Massachusetts communities, welcomes visitors of all ages and serves as a land base for our conservation efforts.
For more than 110 years, we have been a leader in biological conservation—through the preservation of critical habitats that are essential to the well being of plants, wildlife, and people. We help protect 154 of Massachusetts’ 430 endangered species, and 20 of the approximately 30 endangered or threatened habitats. We also involve interested citizens in our biological conservation initiatives, training volunteers to help us monitor bird habitats and restored salt marshes, conduct dragonfly inventories, monitor nesting endangered coastal birds, assist with bird banding, perform water quality analysis and many other activities.
As a leader in environmental advocacy, we work with local citizens, municipal officials, corporate leaders, state legislators, and civic groups to protect some of the Commonwealth’s most precious natural resources. We have helped pass some of the strongest environmental laws in the country - including the Endangered Species Act of 1990. More recent accomplishments include successful passage of the Community Preservation Act, and the recently enacted, first in the county, Ocean Management Bill.