“To me it’s unbelievable we’ve reached that size,” said Dave Carr, a  Nature Conservancy program manager in Helena and a 24-year employee.  “That’s a very large amount of land we have helped protect and conserve,  and many of those lands are what I call working lands. They’re still  being used. They just won’t be subdivided.”
It  took 35 years for TNC to reach the million-acre milestone, which the  group announced earlier this month. The largest conservation  organization in the world, TNC opened its doors in Big Sky Country in  1978 when it secured its first conservation easement in the Blackfoot  River Valley, one of the state’s first private conservation easements,  Carr said.
Today,  the organization has had a hand in protecting 1,004,308 acres of land  statewide, from ranches in the Rocky Mountain foothills of northcentral  Montana in grizzly bear habitat to unbroken native prairie on the  northeastern plains to forested land in the river valleys of western  Montana.
Lands TNC  works to protect often are privately owned ranches that feature native  habitat and wildlife, but the aim isn’t to end agricultural uses.
“We  very much like to see lands stay in some productive use,” Carr said.  “We feel that for long-term conservation, if the community is not part  of that decision or doesn’t buy into that, it won’t be lasting.”
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