Comprehensive wildlife and habitat management demands the integration of scientific information from several disciplines, including understanding ecological processes and monitoring status of fish, wildlife and plants. Equally important is an intimate understanding of the social and economic drivers that impact and are affected by management decisions and can facilitate or impede implementation success. Service strategic habitat conservation planning, design, and delivery efforts are affected by the demographic, societal, and cultural changes of population growth and urbanization, as well as people's attitudes and values toward wildlife. Consideration of these factors contributes to the success of the service's mission to protect wildlife and their habitats. The refuge system works collaboratively internally and externally to leverage resources and achieve effective conservation. It works with other federal agencies, state fish and wildlife agencies, tribes, nongovernmental organizations, local landowners, community volunteers, and other partners. Meaningful engagement with stakeholders at a regional, integrated level adds to the effective conservation achievements of the FWS and allows individual refuges to respond more effectively to challenges. Wildlife and habitat management activities include: • Monitoring plant and animal populations • Restoring wetland, forest, grassland, and marine habitats • Controlling the spread of invasive species • Reintroducing rare fish, wildlife and plants to formerly occupied habitats • Monitoring air quality • Investigating and cleaning contaminants • Preventing and controlling wildlife disease outbreaks • Assessing water quality and quantity • Understanding the complex relationship between people and wildlife through the integration of social science • Managing habitats through manipulation of water levels, prescribed burning, haying, grazing,timber harvest, and planting vegetation During fiscal year 2015, the refuge system manipulated 3.1 million acres of habitat (technique #10 from the preceding list) and managed 147 million acres of the system without habitat manipulation (using techniques #1 through 9 from the preceding list). • Uplands managed: 1.9 million acres • Wetlands managed: 1.0 million acres • Open water managed: 0.2 million acres • Treated by prescribed burning: 0.3 million acres • Treated to control invasive plants: 0.2 million acres • Protected but not manipulated: 147 million acres Refuges attract about 65 million visitors each year who come to hunt, fish, observe, and photograph wildlife, and are a significant boon to local economies. According to the FWS's
2013 Banking on Nature Report, visitors to refuges positively impact the local economies. The report details that 47 million people who visited refuges that year: • Generated $2.4 billion of sales in regional economies • Supported over 35,000 jobs • Generated $342.9 million in tax revenues at the local, county, state, and federal levels • Contributed a total of $4.5 billion to the nation's economy
Visitation • Wildlife observation visits in FY 2021: 41.7 million • Nature photography visits in FY 2021: 15.1 million • Fishing visits in FY 2021: 8.0 million • Interpretive program visits in FY 2021: 2.5 million • Hunting visits in FY 2021: 2.5 million • Environmental education visits in FY 2021: 0.4 million • Other visits in FY 2021: 10.9 million • Total visits in FY 2021: 65 million
Volunteers • Total volunteers in FY 2014: 36,000 • Total volunteer hours in FY 2014: 1.4 million
Personnel • Total staff: 2,424
full-time equivalents (FY 2022 total) • Number of Federal Wildlife Officers: 214 (source: FY 2024 Budget Justification) • Number of firefighters: 460 (360 permanent and 100 temporary staff) ==Law enforcement==