Site icon Georgia Wildlife Blog

Check the Wildlife Checkoff

Nesting anhinga and a defensive wood stork at Harris Neck National Wildlife Refuge near Townsend (Jimmy Cash/Georgia Nature Photographers Association)

We all know tax time is a pain.

But for Georgians, at least filing their state income taxes offers a unique opportunity to give native wildlife a leg – or wing, root, scale or fin – up. And unlike other things involving taxes, the Georgia Wildlife Conservation Fund checkoff is easy-peasy.

DNR’s Robert Lamb with a finelined pocketbook, a federally threatened mussel species (Ani Escobar/DNR)

All you do is:

DNR’s Wildlife Conservation Section leads this work and depends on grants, donations and contributions. The Give Wildlife a Chance checkoff has been a key source of support since state lawmakers created it and what’s officially called the Nongame Wildlife Conservation and Habitat Acquisition Fund some 35 years ago.

The checkoff made up 9 percent of revenue in the last fiscal year. For more on what your giving goes to, see Conserving Georgia’s Wildlife in 2024.

Alabama leatherflower seed-collection crew, part of an effort to conserve and restore the endangered plant in northwest Georgia (DNR)

Top: Nesting anhinga and a defensive wood stork at Harris Neck National Wildlife Refuge near Townsend (Jimmy Cash/Georgia Nature Photographers Association)
Exit mobile version