Pleasant River Wildlife Foundation

The Pleasant Bay region of downeast Maine offers tremendous opportunities to protect dramatic habitat, with great value for wildlife and people.

PRWF is committed to protecting internationally important habitat for waterbirds.

PRWF currently focuses its habitat protection efforts in four Project Areas, including Mason Bay, Pleasant Bay, Crowley Island and Lily Pond Meadows.
Contact Information
Main Contact
- Anne & John Marshall, Founders: President, Vice-President/Treasurer
- P.O. Box 154
- Addison, ME 04606
- Phone: (207)483-4184
- Email: annemarshall@pleasant-river.org
- Lois Winter, Executive Director
- 50 Alden Circle
- Portland, ME 04102
- Phone: (207) 871-8029
- Email: loiswinter@pleasant-river.org
Alternate Contact
MLTN Member
Mission Statement
Pleasant River Wildlife Foundation is a land trust working to protect biologically valuable wildlife habitat on the Downeast Coast and committed to preserving traditional public access for residents and visitors. Priority is given to conserving wetland properties important to waterfowl, wading birds, shorebirds and uplands for woodcock in Addison and nearby coastal towns. Current land acquisition work is focused on protecting important habitat in four Project Areas -- eastern shore of Pleasant Bay from Long Cove to Ports Harbor, Lily Pond Meadows, Crowley Island and Mason Bay.
We are working closely with other land trust partners in the region and with state and federal agencies to coordinate the Heads of the Estuaries Partnership. See "Activities" below for more information.
Region
Coastal Washington County
Quick Facts
- Number of Staff: 1
- Membership: PRWF is not a membership organization
- Acres owned: 1,619
- Number of Parcels: 22
- Founded: 1998
- 25 miles of coastal shorefront,
- 5,000 acres of upland adjacent to intertidal or exceptional nearcoast freshwater habitat, and
- 2,500 acres of intertidal wetlands and fresh water wetlands.
Pleasant River Wildlife Foundation (PRWF) is spearheading the Heads of the Estuaries Partnership, an expansive landscape-scale initiative that also engages active involvement of Downeast Coastal Conservancy and Maine Coast Heritage Trust, and enjoys enthusiastic support from other local, state and federal conservation organizations and agencies that share a vision to protect high value coastal wetland and waterbird habitat stretching 31 miles from the mouth of the Narraguagus River to the Machias and East Machias Rivers. The Heads of the Estuaries Partnership has identified five Priority Areas -- Machias Bay, Little Kennebec Bay, Mason Bay, Pleasant Bay/Crowley Island and Back Bay. In all of these Areas, we focus on:
1) permanently protecting internationally significant intertidal and adjacent freshwater habitat for waterfowl (notably, the American black duck), wading birds, shorebirds and woodcock, and
2) to the extent compatible with wildlife habitat protection and management, assuring permanent public access to undeveloped land and waters for traditional recreational uses, such as clamming, worming, hunting, birdwatching, boating, and walking.
Ambitious land protection projects have already been realized in the broad region of downeast coastal Maine (including coastal islands, commercial timberlands and Atlantic salmon river corridors). Now, we believe it is time to direct focused effort on protecting high priority coastal mainland properties that provide exceptional habitat for waterbirds, that are most highly threatened by poorly planned or sited residential (particularly second home) development, gravel mining and other commercial activities, and where guaranteed public access is critical for local residents.
From 2008-2013, the Heads of the Estuaries Partnership (HEP) will be focused on protecting:
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