Conservation

2023-24 AmeriCorps Highlights

In our 2023-24 member service year, we supported 34 AmeriCorps members at 20 organizations whose sites, programs, and activities were visited by 39,860 individuals. These members delivered educational programs to an audience of over 5,000 individuals, treated and improved 1,052 acres of public land, and managed 1,501 hours of volunteer service. 1,184 individuals who participated in our stewardship education programs reported increased knowledge of environmental stewardship.

Read what some of our AmeriCorps members had to say about their service year:


"Hey everyone! My name is Madison Fernandez, and I'm currently serving with the Forest Service in Marlinton as a watershed and fisheries technician. During my year of service, I've spent a lot of my time leading snorkel events for different youth groups around West Virginia. When we're snorkeling, we're looking for various fish species while guiding locals and visitors alike through the public resource of the Monongahela National Forest. I've also been aiding my team by monitoring the health of our streams and rivers through water chemistry samples, temperature loggers, habitat and population surveys, and various other activities. I love the sense of purpose my position gives me as I focus on public outreach and exposing others to the wonders of our forest, and I'm grateful that AFNHA has given me the opportunity to live and serve in such a wonderful place!


"I'm Maddy Fleming and I am the AmeriCorps serving with the Randolph County Museum and 4-H Camp Pioneer through the Appalachian Forest National Heritage Area. This is my second year in this position and I have been delighted to work on a variety of projects at these sites. My service throughout the year consists of archives and collections management, exhibit research and design, writing outreach, and collecting oral histories. In the summertime, I assist as a volunteer and counselor during Randolph County 4-H Camps and serve as the Randolph County Museum's primary docent. I have also assisted the Randolph County Historical Society with their centennial project this year, including the creation of exhibit panels and brochures for the museum. For 4-H Camp Pioneer's 4-H History Round-Up Project, I've also created display panels focusing on the history of 4-H Camps in Randolph County. I've enjoyed so much of my service with AFNHA and AmeriCorps, and it's been an honor to be a part of such a passionate community, all working to preserve our region's rich history and culture!"


"This past year, I have had the pleasure of serving as a Watershed and Fisheries AmeriCorps with the Monongahela National Forest. I have had a wide array of experiences from leading river snorkeling outreach to helping with stream restoration projects. For my major project, I worked with our Range Technician, Hannah Scrafford, to monitor soil disturbances on the Forest grazing allotments. This project was a highlight of my service, not only because I found the work meaningful, but it was wonderful to learn about other programs within the Forest Service. It is always special when we can work together. It is hard to sum up all the work I have had the privilege of helping with this past year, but I am incredibly grateful for the opportunity to do meaningful work in such a beautifully wild place"
- Carlyle Grundon


“My name is Geneva Brown and I am an AmeriCorps member with AFNHA serving with The Nature Conservancy.  As my first term is coming to an end I figured I would share how my year has looked.  This year has given me the opportunity to try so many new things.  Much of my position involved the yearly monitoring of the preserves and easements TNC has across West Virginia. I have also participated in trail building.  Most notably I helped build the new ¾ mile loop trail at TNC’s Bear Rocks Preserve.  My major project for this year was monitoring a red spruce and balsam fir tree planting in Canaan Valley from three years ago.  This project gave me an amazing look into how saplings handle drought conditions. I am looking forward to the new adventures of next term!”


“For the past 2 years I have served as an education and outreach aide for the WV Division of Forestry. I've been traveling around the state leading environmental education programs at different schools, summer camps, educational conferences and events. Over the course of my service, I was able to educate over 6,000 students statewide. I am so thankful for all the opportunities and experiences l've had as an AFNHA AmeriCorps.”
-Kacey Shiflett

Citizen Science Education Program on Non-Native and Invasive Species

Citizen Science Education Program on Non-Native and Invasive Species

Every March the WV Division of Forestry organizes 4 citizen science lessons for 5th graders at Petersburg Elementary School. These lessons are about Non-Native and Invasive Species (NNIS). We teach these students what non-native and invasive species are, how they spread, how to identify specific species, and how to use GPS data to locate, track, and record information on them.

A Year in Canaan Valley

A Year in Canaan Valley

My year at Canaan Valley National Wildlife Refuge has been incredibly rewarding and something I will always remember fondly. I am very grateful for my time as an AmeriCorps member and I am lucky to have served at two different National Wildlife Refuges. I felt that I was able to learn more and really advance my skill set through my year-long position with AFNHA. I highly recommend AmeriCorps and AFNHA to anyone that is looking to get their foot in the door in the field of conservation and gain valuable experience.

School Visits at Seneca Rocks

School Visits at Seneca Rocks

This year for the first time the Seneca Rocks Discovery Center and the USDA Forest Service hosted 4th graders from Pendleton County for a day full outdoor recreation, cultural heritage, and fun! 56 students from the surrounding area visited stations set up on the Discovery Center grounds focusing on cultural heritage of the area and outdoor recreation activities in the hope to encourage more exploration of the public lands around them.

Two Years of a Little Extra Life

Two Years of a Little Extra Life

One of the most enduring and inspiring aspects of living and working in West Virginia is that there is a collective understanding to uphold both the heritage and natural ecosystems that we all know, use, and love. With fishing, hunting, and outdoor recreation being such an ingrained part of the generational history and tourism, it is hard to not feel like I have the privilege of living a little extra life every time I go to serve.

While my first year had given me a new understanding of the importance of stream habitat and protecting aquatic species like the enigmatic endangered Candy Darter and jaw dropping Eastern Hellbender, my second has year allowed me to find my niche in conservation: true science that goes into surveying and monitoring terrestrial wildlife and resurrecting habitat that was lost during the timber and mining booms of the 20th century.

Red Spruce Restoration and American Chestnut Planting Projects

Red Spruce Restoration and American Chestnut Planting Projects

The WV Division of Forestry has managed the Red Spruce Restoration project at Kumbrabow State Forest for the past three years. Local 4-H students have been helping them plant roughly 1,000 red spruce saplings each May. This project is part of the Central Appalachian Spruce Restoration Initiative (CASRI). Red spruce now covers about 178,000 acres at high elevations in the Allegheny Mountains and places on North Fork Mountain.

Read how Kacey is helping to restore Red Spruce and American Chestnut forests!

Northern Saw-whet Owl Banding

Northern Saw-whet Owl Banding

On a cold clear night, when the moon is dark and a north wind blows, northern saw-whet owls take wing for their fall migration. Bird banders across the US and Canada set up their nets in strategic locations and watch the weather closely for good conditions, checking their nets regularly for birds.

Learn how volunteers at Canaan Valley National Wildlife Refuge identify and track owls for study.

Red Spruce Indicator Species

Red Spruce Indicator Species

Wild and wonderful West Virginia contains a wondrous and unique ecosystem of red spruce. This species of tree and the ecosystem it creates is historic to West Virginia. In the 1800s and into the 1900’s it was a highly sought-after tree for lumber. Now, it’s the focus of some of the conservation work taking place in West Virginia and the Central Appalachians. The lumbering industry took a heavy toll on this ecosystem, reducing the acreage of red spruce forests from over 500,000 to just a little under 30,000. This means the other species that rely on this ecosystem for habitats, like the endangered cheat mountain salamander and the West Virginia northern flying squirrel, also suffered. Today, conservationists are working to restore this ecosystem in order to create healthy spruce forests and bring back the biodiversity this ecosystem creates. So, how do we know the actions being taken are working? That's where indicator species come in.

Candy darters, brook trout, and hellbenders – oh my!

Candy darters, brook trout, and hellbenders – oh my!

Before joining AFNHA AmeriCorps, when I thought of West Virginia’s freshwater systems I imagined trout, forested streams, and crayfish – there is so much more to them than just that! While I have plenty of snorkeling experience, I have never been able to immerse myself in such diverse freshwater systems until I came to work in the Monongahela National Forest. Snorkeling allows you to experience the stream in a completely unique way; fish are accustomed to predators approaching from above similar to how a kingfisher or heron would hunt so when you join them in the water to swim alongside them, they are less skittish.