Buscar

¿Buscas algo en específico?

Busca informes, planes y recursos en todo el NAWMP.

A male northern pintail rises from the water with one wing extended.
About the plan
What is the NAWMP?

The North American Waterfowl Management Plan (NAWMP) is a partnership-driven framework that guides habitat conservation, population objectives, and coordinated management across North America.

It established a network of Joint Ventures and helped shape programs like the North American Wetlands Conservation Act (NAWCA), supporting on-the-ground habitat conservation across Canada, the United States, and México.

CONTINENTAL CONSERVATION SYSTEM
A Coordinated Approach to Waterfowl Conservation
3
Nations Endorse the Plan
Canada, the United States, and México have formally endorsed NAWMP
25
Joint Ventures Deliver Conservation
Regional partnerships implement NAWMP priorities across flyways and landscapes.
40+
Years of Coordinated Conservation
A long-standing framework guiding waterfowl and habitat conservation across North America.
Students wearing waders stand in a shallow creek during an outdoor learning activity.
THE NAWMP PARTNERSHIP
Conserving Habitat Together

Waterfowl know no borders — and neither does the work of protecting them. NAWMP unites hundreds of agencies, organizations, and Joint Ventures across Canada, the United States, and México around a single shared purpose: conserving the habitat that waterfowl and wildlife depend on, now and for generations to come.

40 Years of Conservation
Celebrating 40 years of the NAWMP

Since 1986, the North American Waterfowl Management Plan has guided coordinated conservation across Canada, the United States, and México. Explore the milestones, partnerships, and progress that have shaped four decades of waterfowl conservation.

Get Started
Start Exploring the NAWMP
Explore the plan, the partnership, and the tools guiding waterfowl conservation across North America.
photo of forest
The Plan
Continental Conservation Strategy

See the goals, objectives, and strategies guiding waterfowl conservation across North America.

Nature Conservancy of Canada Eastern Habitat Joint Venture NAWCA wetland protection project location
The Partnership
A Network Built to Deliver Conservation

Joint Ventures and partners implement NAWMP priorities and deliver habitat conservation across regions.

Sun setting over the water
Resources
Tools Supporting Conservation

Browse reports, action plans, and data that support conservation across flyways.

The future of waterfowl conservation depends on growing and strengthening partnerships across North America.
Continental Partnership
A Network Delivering Conservation Across North America
The North American Waterfowl Management Plan brings together agencies, organizations, and Joint Ventures to implement conservation priorities and deliver habitat outcomes across Canada, the United States, and México.
Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks is a state wildlife agency and NAWMP partner that manages waterfowl habitat and populations across Montana's diverse landscapes, from prairie wetlands to mountain river systems that support migratory birds throughout the Pacific and Central Flyways.
The U.S. Geological Survey provides the scientific foundation for NAWMP decision-making, delivering long-term waterfowl population data, habitat assessments, and research that guides conservation priorities across the continent.
The North American Wetlands Conservation Council oversees the administration of the North American Wetlands Conservation Act, directing grants that fund wetland habitat protection and restoration projects across the United States, Canada, and México in support of NAWMP's continental goals.
UPCOMING WEBINAR: APRIL 29, 2026 · 1–2 PM EDT
Victims and Vectors: Waterfowl and HPAI in North America

Led by USGS research ecologist Dr. Diann Prosser, this webinar explores how highly pathogenic avian influenza is affecting waterfowl—and what it means for conservation and disease risk across North America.

A fulvous whistling duck stands near dark green water.
A fulvous whistling duck in wetland habitat.
A Model For International Conservation
Explore the North American Waterfowl Management Plan