This area focuses on the overuse of natural resources through stories of modern efforts to bring back balance to impacted ecosystems. Highlights include the freshwater mussel of the Mississippi, the Massasauga Rattlesnake and the Wyoming Toad. These are all species within the Mississippi watershed that the River Museum is participating in conservation programs. More broadly, the Association of Zoos & Aquarium’s (AZA) flagship conservation program SAFE (Saving Animals From Extinction) highlights each of these significant species, helping us to maximize the impact of our conservation efforts by working together with dozens of external partners.
Species:
- Freshwater mussels are the most endangered group of animals in North America, with >70% of native species threatened, endangered, or already extinct. Jacob Harmon on our Aquarist team is the Co-Chair for AZA SAFE Freshwater Mussels. NMRMA helps to raise juvenile mussels in the Ice Harbor each year and participates in Mussel Blitz river surveys.
- Massasauga rattlesnakes were once common in the Driftless Area but now exist only in scattered pockets. NMRMA began participating in field conservation work in 2024.
- Wyoming Toads are classified as extinct-in-the-wild and would be truly extinct if not for the efforts of the US Fish & Wildlife Service and AZA zoos and aquariums like NMRMA. Since 2008, NMRMA has raised over 55,000 tadpoles that were shipped back to Wyoming for release.