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New Mexico Land Conservancy

Helping people conserve the places they love.

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Conservation easements protect:

Water

Helping ensure that our watersheds remain whole and healthy – filtering and replenishing – and that precious, life-giving rivers, streams and other water flows are protected.

Wildlife

Helping protect the natural resources that wildlife depend on: water, habitat, and open space for their migratory corridors and flyways. After all, wildlife – and nature, in general – doesn’t recognize property lines!

Working Lands    

Helping ranchers and farmers keep their properties whole and their heritage preserved, providing food and protecting New Mexico’s open space for public benefit.

Our Vision: One Million Acres Conserved!

Goal: 1,000,000 acres by 2030!

686,245 total acres conserved!

Land Conservation protects water, too!

Land conservation can play a critical role in ensuring that our watersheds remain whole and healthy. New Mexico Land Conservancy efforts  have led to:

Conservation of:

0miles
of seasonal and perennial waterways

.. . . and an additional:

0acres
acres of wetlands
Total acres as of August 15, 2023

 

 

Conserving land. Preserving heritage.

Our mission is to preserve New Mexico’s land heritage by helping people conserve the places they love.

For Love of the Land

Latest News

Seeking a Conservation Stewardship Internship 2024

Build your resume and explore the Southwest! Join our team as Conservation Stewardship Intern 2024.

Click READ MORE for full job description. Application deadline: April 30, 2024

315,000 acres permanently conserved on the Armendaris Ranch in New Mexico

New Mexico Land Conservancy and the Department of Defense partner to protect 315,000 acres of Ted Turner’s Armendaris Ranch in southern New Mexico.

Get the Water Off the Road!

Roads are one of the biggest impediments to our watersheds. They collect, concentrate and divert the original natural surface flow-patterns, causing erosion, down-cutting and accelerating sediment contribution into the mainstream system. Steve Carson explains how to get the water off the road.

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