Ecological Services Facility Directory

Alabama

Alaska

Mountains and rivers from aerial view
Based in Fairbanks, and in collaboration with our Utqiaġvik (Barrow) Satellite Office, we work with others to deliver conservation over approximately 338-million acres of Alaska. Our responsibilities generally range from the Yukon River Delta region in southwest Alaska, eastward to the Canadian...
An aerial landscape photo of a large blue lake along forested land, with snow-capped mountains in the background.
Welcome to our Southern Alaska Office! We have dedicated staff working with partners to conserve fish and wildlife via habitat restoration and conservation, fish assessment and management, technical assistance, cost-sharing, funding, and outreach.
Established in 1971, our office works to support and sustain salmon recovery, improve fisheries, prevent fish habitat degradation fragmentation, restore fish habitat, and control invasive species on the Kenai Peninsula and in western Alaska.

Arizona

A bee visits a single white Saguaro cactus flower.
The Arizona Ecological Services Field Office focuses on plant and wildlife conservation across Arizona spanning diverse ecosystems ranging from arid desert environments to high-elevation montane habitats to lush riparian systems. We work with public, private, and Tribal partners to conserve and...

Arkansas

California

Photo of a foggy morning in the Trinity River Valley.
The Arcata Fish and Wildlife Office is a field office of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Our work in northern California includes scientific assessments, habitat restoration, and conservation of listed species.
a male and female biologists drag a net through a shallow pond to catch California tiger salamander larvae
The Sacramento Fish and Wildlife Office focuses on plant and wildlife conservation in 38 counties spanning California’s Central Valley, San Joaquin Valley, western Sierra Nevada, and Sonoma and Central coastlines. Our large jurisdiction gives us the opportunity to work with diverse partners, and...
A sunrise peeking over a field of flowers
Established in 1987, the Ventura Fish and Wildlife Office works to conserve and protect threatened and endangered fish, wildlife and plants across the central and southern California coast, collaborating with communities and conservation partners to build a future that supports both people and our...
a green meadow with hills in the background
The Yreka Fish and Wildlife Office (Yreka FWO) is an Ecological Services Office in Siskiyou County, northern California and located a few miles south of the Oregon border. Our office supports conservation work within the Shasta-Trinity and Klamath National Forests and adjoining private lands...

Colorado

Landscape image of the Indian Peaks Wilderness in the summer; Storm Over the Continental Divide
The Colorado Ecological Services Field Offices have staff in Lakewood and Grand Junction who work with partners to restore and protect healthy populations of fish, wildlife, and plants, and the environments upon which they depend.

Connecticut

Sunset at the New England Field Office
The New England Field Office serves the New England area by working with others to conserve and protect imperiled species, restore habitats and aquatic connectivity, and connect people to nature.

Delaware

Red knot flock foraging on beach
The Delaware Bay Coastal Program works with partners throughout the New Jersey and Delaware Coast on projects that tie in with our priorities.

Florida

Green sea turtle hatchling in the sand
Serving Florida by conserving our most imperiled species and working with others to conserve plants, fish, and wildlife.

Georgia

Hawaii/Pacific Islands

An ʻakikiki sits on a branch. It is bending over, giving an upside-down look.
Welcome to the Pacific Islands Fish and Wildlife Office! We are part of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's ecological services program. Here we work closely with partners to conserve fish, wildlife, plants, and their habitats throughout Pacific Islands. The areas we help to protect include the...

Idaho

Stanley Lake, Idaho. Mountain reflection.
The Idaho Fish and Wildlife Office is part of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Ecological Services program. We work closely with diverse partners to conserve the natural resources of Idaho, and together, find balance between the needs of people and wildlife.

Illinois

Image collage of federally listed species in Illinois-Iowa including decurrent false aster, rusty patched bumble bee, Iowa Pleistocene snail, eastern massasauga rattlesnake, and freshwater mussel species
The Illinois-Iowa Field Office is the home of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Ecological Services Division, for the states of Illinois and Iowa. Ecological Services at the Illinois-Iowa Field Office includes the following programs: Endangered Species, Environmental Response and Restoration,...

Indiana

Picture of the Indiana Ecological Services Field Office building
We are the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service office working to protect and conserve endangered, threatened and rare species, migratory birds, inter-jurisdictional fish and their habitats in Indiana, and ensuring compliance with federal wildlife laws such as the Endangered Species Act. Our strategy for...

Iowa

Image collage of federally listed species in Illinois-Iowa including decurrent false aster, rusty patched bumble bee, Iowa Pleistocene snail, eastern massasauga rattlesnake, and freshwater mussel species
The Illinois-Iowa Field Office is the home of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Ecological Services Division, for the states of Illinois and Iowa. Ecological Services at the Illinois-Iowa Field Office includes the following programs: Endangered Species, Environmental Response and Restoration,...

Kansas

Numerous ducks in flight over a spring landscape of leafless trees
The USFWS Kansas Ecological Services Field Office is located in Manhattan, Kansas, in the northern Flint Hills. The office provides information related to at-risk, threatened and endangered species that may occur in Kansas and other management directives for the USFWS and partners.

Kentucky

Louisiana

Prescribed burning on Partners for Fish & Wildlife site
The Louisiana Ecological Services field station was established in 1972. We strive for ecosystem sustainability through preservation, conservation, enhancement, and restoration of habitats essential for the long-term viability of the fish, wildlife, and plants in Louisiana. The field office...

Maine

Piping plover on sandy beach
Welcome to the Maine Field Office Website. Our goal here is to provide you with information about what your U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Maine Ecological Services Office is doing for you and for the fish and wildlife in our area of responsibility, the State of Maine.

Maryland

Nest of with eight American black duck chicks
We work with landowners, private and community organizations, government agencies and others to conserve, protect and enhance fish and wildlife in the Chesapeake Bay area including Delaware, Maryland and the District of Columbia. Our conservation priorities include: endangered, threatened and at-...

Massachusetts

Sunset at the New England Field Office
The New England Field Office serves the New England area by working with others to conserve and protect imperiled species, restore habitats and aquatic connectivity, and connect people to nature.

Michigan

Mussels
We are the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service office responsible for the following activities in Michigan: administering the Endangered Species Act; identifying sources of environmental contamination, assessing impacts of contaminants to fish and wildlife resources and helping to restore contaminated...

Minnesota

two large white wading birds with red heads walk in a wetland
We are the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service office responsible for the following activities in Minnesota and Wisconsin: administering the Endangered Species Act; identifying sources of environmental contamination, assessing impacts of contaminants to fish and wildlife resources and helping to restore...

Mississippi

Long-leaf pine forest.
Serving Mississippi by conserving our most imperiled species and working with federal and state agencies, private landowners, and others to conserve plants, fish, and wildlife. The Mississippi Ecological Services office is the oldest field office in the country, first established in 1948.

Missouri

Elevated view of a shrub-dominated landscape with sparse trees and a canal in the foreground
The Missouri Ecological Services Field Office focuses on Endangered Species, Environmental Contaminants, Natural Resource Damage Assessment and Restoration, and Conservation Planning Assistance in the state of Missouri. Our goal is to work with people to conserve and restore endangered species,...

Montana

Piping plover adult and chick on beach
The Montana Ecological Services Field Office coordinates with federal and state agencies, local governments, private and non-governmental organizations, and tribes to conserve, protect, and enhance fish, wildlife, plants, and their habitats within the state of Montana for the continuing benefit of...

Nebraska

A broad, calm, river, with trees on the far bank and blue skies above.
Welcome to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Nebraska Ecological Services Field Office webpage! We are here to conserve, protect, and enhance fish, wildlife, plants and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the American people. We provide biological advice to the public, federal, and state...

Nevada

Sierra Nevada bighorn sheep climb up a rocky ridge line with mountains in the distance.
The Reno Fish and Wildlife Office works with our partners to protect and conserve endangered fish, wildlife, plants, and their habitats in Nevada's Great Basin, the Eastern Sierra, and the Tahoe Basin for the continuing benefit of the American people.
Desert Tortoise
The Southern Nevada Fish and Wildlife Office was established in 1995 primarily to work on recovery and regulatory issues related to the Mojave population of the threatened desert tortoise (Gopherus agassizii), and to help with efforts to conserve native desert fishes in southern Nevada.

New Hampshire

Sunset at the New England Field Office
The New England Field Office serves the New England area by working with others to conserve and protect imperiled species, restore habitats and aquatic connectivity, and connect people to nature.

New Jersey

New Jersey Pinelands
The New Jersey Field Office protects endangered species, supports federal planning, mitigates environmental contamination, and partners with landowners to restore wildlife habitats. We work with others across New Jersey to conserve, protect, and enhance fish, wildlife, plants, and their habitats...

New Mexico

scenic photos in ghost ranch new mexico
We work with public and private partners to conserve and restore New Mexico's threatened and endangered species, migratory birds, wetlands, and other important fish and wildlife resources. To accomplish our mission, we implement the following priorities: Endangered Species, Environmental...

New York

Piping plover adult and chick on beach
The Long Island Field Office works in partnership with other federal, state, and local agencies, non-government organizations, and private landowners to conserve, protect, and enhance fish and wildlife resources on Long Island and throughout the New York City boroughs, Rockland, and Westchester...
Federally Threatened Bog Turtle (Glyptemys muhlenbergii)
Through a series of laws created over the last century, Americans have declared that we need to collectively protect landscapes, fish, wildlife, and plants. Several agencies in the federal government put our country's conservation laws into action, and the Ecological Services Program of the U.S....

North Carolina

Rolling, forest-covered mountains beneath a partly cloudy sky
Serving western North Carolina and southern Appalachia by conserving our most imperiled species and working with federal agencies to conserve plants, fish, and wildlife.
Patches of yellow-green emerge from the water while channels of water reflect a cloudy blue-grey sky.
Our vision is to collaboratively foster vibrant, healthy, abundant and self-sustaining resources within the Piedmont, Sandhills, and Coastal Plain by promoting nature based solutions. Congress has entrusted the Service to conserve and protect federal trust resources for the public's use and benefit...

North Dakota

Ohio

Sheepnose (left) and Rabbitsfoot, Walhonding River, Ohio
The Ohio Ecological Services Field Office focuses on conserving endangered, threatened and rare species, migratory birds, inter-jurisdictional fish and their habitats in Ohio and ensuring compliance with federal wildlife laws such as the Endangered Species Act. Our strategy for conservation relies...

Oklahoma

Oregon

white birds on a body of water with a snow capped mountain in the background
Within the Upper Klamath Basin, conservation efforts are coordinated by the Klamath Falls Fish and Wildlife Office through the voluntary cooperation and participation of a variety of agencies, organizations, private landowners, and individuals.
Trees and lupine at Metolius Preserve in Oregon by Bonnie Moreland
The Oregon Fish and Wildlife Office is part of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Ecological Services program. We work closely with partners to conserve fish, wildlife, plants, and their habitats throughout Oregon for future generations.

Pennsylvania

A small turtle walks through the grass
The Pennsylvania Ecological Services Field Office is located in State College, Pennsylvania. We provide technical assistance and consultation to private citizens, local, county and state governments and federal partners in all 67 counties throughout the commonwealth.

Puerto Rico

Aerial view of a beach with the sun setting in the background
Striving for ecosystem sustainability through preservation, conservation, enhancement, and restoration of habitats essential for the long-term viability of the fish, wildlife, and plants in the Caribbean.

Rhode Island

A saltmarsh sparrow perched on a reed
We work with public and private partners to conserve and restore important habitat for fish and wildlife resources in the Southern New England Estuary Project area.

South Carolina

South Dakota

Tennessee

White fringeless orchid
The Tennessee Field Office is a leader in conserving Tennessee's imperiled species and their habitats, ensuring that sustainable populations of fish, wildlife, and plants continue to thrive for future generations.

Texas

A collage of twenty-six photos of animals, staff doing field work, and landscapes that Austin ecological services field office is responsible for.
The Austin Ecological Services Field Office is one of four field offices throughout the state of Texas under the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Ecological Services program. This program works closely with our partners to conserve the nation's fish, wildlife, plants and habitat by providing...
A wild cat with brown, white, and black markings gazes upward
The Texas Coastal and Central Plains Ecological Services Field Office focuses on Federal project and infrastructure review; threatened and endangered species listing, recovery, consultation, and permits; Natural Resource Damage and Assessment; Partners for Fish and Wildlife; and Gulf Restoration...

Utah

Red rocks, sand, and desert shrubs at Red Cliffs Desert Reserve
Our Vision: Achieving sustainable native species and ecosystems through leadership, partnerships, and innovation.

Vermont

Sunset at the New England Field Office
The New England Field Office serves the New England area by working with others to conserve and protect imperiled species, restore habitats and aquatic connectivity, and connect people to nature.

Virgin Islands

Aerial view of a beach with the sun setting in the background
Striving for ecosystem sustainability through preservation, conservation, enhancement, and restoration of habitats essential for the long-term viability of the fish, wildlife, and plants in the Caribbean.

Virginia

Water cascading over rock into pool in the Upper Tennessee River Basin with trees in background
We administer the Endangered Species Act, working with experts in the scientific community to identify species on the verge of extinction and to build the road to recovery to bring them back. We work with our partners in federal and state agencies, tribes, local governments, the business community...

Washington

Mount Rainier rises from behind fog and trees on a ridgeline
The Washington Fish and Wildlife Office is part of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Ecological Services program. We work closely with partners to conserve fish, wildlife, plants, and their habitats throughout Washington for future generations.

West Virginia

View from Roaring Plains
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service West Virginia Field Office works with others to conserve, protect and enhance fish, wildlife and plants and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the American people. Our office helps to recover threatened and endangered species, enforces federal fish,...

Wisconsin

We work with diverse partners to conserve, restore and enhance fish and other aquatic resources for the continuing benefit of all American people. Our activities include using a science-based approach toward the restoration and rehabilitation of native fish and aquatic species in the Lake Michigan...
two large white wading birds with red heads walk in a wetland
We are the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service office responsible for the following activities in Minnesota and Wisconsin: administering the Endangered Species Act; identifying sources of environmental contamination, assessing impacts of contaminants to fish and wildlife resources and helping to restore...

Wyoming

A herd of elk in a snowy field and craggy mountains in the backdrop.
The Wyoming Ecological Services Field Office is responsible for conserving, protecting and enhancing federally protected fish and wildlife and their habitats in the State. The office seeks to carry out its responsibilities by working cooperatively with other Federal and State agencies, various...