
Department of Conservation and Recreation

By Guest AuthorPosted October 07, 2025
State agencies are working together on a new deer management program that provides conservation-driven hunting opportunities. READ MOREBy Guest AuthorPosted September 13, 2024
The Virginia Master Naturalist (VMN) program is a statewide corps of volunteers providing education, outreach and service dedicated to the beneficial management of natural resources and natural areas within their communities.  The Virginia Department of Conservation and Recreation has been a sponsor of the program since 2005. READ MOREBy Emi EndoPosted March 26, 2024
Native river cane is making a comeback thanks to volunteer efforts. READ MOREBy Haley RodgersPosted October 05, 2023
Interested in becoming a Virginia Master Naturalist? Read why one DCR employee says the training is worth doing. READ MOREBy Emi EndoPosted September 27, 2023
See how Virginia gardeners have introduced native plants to their yards. READ MOREBy Emi EndoPosted September 12, 2023
Eastern Shore Chapter of Virginia Master Naturalists receive new grants to replace invasive plants with native species and install signs. READ MOREBy Rebecca JonesPosted July 25, 2022
Let your voice be heard in the next Virginia Outdoors Plan READ MOREBy Guest AuthorPosted June 09, 2022
A research team of students, faculty and alumni at George Mason University, led by Andrea Weeks, associate professor, associate chair of research, Department of Biology, helped rediscover a population of Ozark milkvetch on Short Mountain in Shenandoah County. READ MOREBy Emi EndoPosted June 06, 2022
To combat an invasive pest that has been decimating eastern hemlock trees in Virginia, researchers enlisted a predatory beetle that feeds on those pests. READ MOREBy Emi EndoPosted March 07, 2022
The Virginia Natural Heritage Program has contributed to a project led by NatureServe to develop a Map of Biodiversity Importance that offers an unprecedented, high-resolution view of where to protect the most imperiled plants and animals. We spoke with Anne Chazal, chief biologist at the Virginia Natural Heritage Program and a co-author of the study. READ MORE