The Albany Pine Bush once covered over 25,000 acres. Today, less than 6,000 acres of wild habitat remains.
Habitat loss is the number one most pressing threat to the future of the inland pine barrens ecosystem. Commercial and residential development, gaining momentum in the 1970s and persisting through today, has chipped away at the inland pine barrens. Roads, buildings and parking lots separate what remains of this landscape into disconnected fragments. Less habitat and more barriers to dispersal create difficult living conditions for pine barrens species and threatens their future.
Learn what we are doing to help protect habitat in the Albany Pine Bush.
Learn how you can help add more land to the Albany Pine Bush Preserve.