Darling penned some conservation cartoons, and he was an important figure in the
conservation movement. President Franklin Roosevelt appointed him to a blue-ribbon Committee on Wildlife Restoration in 1934. FDR sought political balance by putting the Hoover Republican on the committee, knowing he was an articulate advocate for wildlife management. Following the passage of the Migratory Bird Hunting Stamp Act in 1934, which required
waterfowl hunters to purchase a
Federal Duck Stamp before hunting, Darling designed the first Federal Duck Stamp that year and was appointed Director of the Bureau of Biological Survey, a forerunner of the
United States Fish and Wildlife Service. The
J. N. "Ding" Darling National Wildlife Refuge on
Sanibel Island in southwest Florida is named after him, as is the
Lake Darling State Park in
Iowa that was dedicated on September 17, 1950. Lake Darling, a 9,600-acre lake at the
Upper Souris National Wildlife Refuge is also named in his honor. More recently a lodge at the
National Conservation Training Center near Shepherdstown, West Virginia was named in his honor. Darling was elected as a member of the
Boone and Crockett Club, a wildlife conservation organization, on December 13, 1934. He was instrumental in founding the
National Wildlife Federation in 1936, when President Franklin Roosevelt convened the first North American Wildlife Conference (now the North American Wildlife and Natural Resources Conference), administered by the American Wildlife Institute (now Wildlife Management Institute). ==Awards==