Every forest, marsh, and meadow in New Brunswick is alive with stories—if you know where to look. From the call of the barred owl at dusk to the tiny lichens quietly clinging to old-growth trees, these species are more than names in a guidebook. They are neighbours, teachers, and part of the places we call home.
Here, you’ll find profiles of the species that make our protected places so special. Learn how they live, what they need, and how your support helps them thrive. Whether you’re curious about a plant you spotted on a hike, or want to know more about the creatures calling our wetlands home, this is your place to explore.
Species at risk
They belong here. Let’s keep it that way.
-
Learn about our work to protect endangered species
-species profile: x species [link to that page]
-species profile: x species [link to that page]
-continue for all species on the endangered species conservation page
-
Change this Title to: Feature stories
Then here, list them:
Furbish’s Lousewort: a species on the edge [linked]
Bobolink: a little bird’s cross-continental tour [linked]
etc — include all the species feature stories in the section below, too
For feature stories where the species name isn’t in the title, add it at the start for clarity. So instead of ‘Bank burrowing brown birds’ its: Bank swallow: bank-burrowing brown birds | Instead of ‘who cooks for you??’ it’s: Barred owl: who cooks for you?!
etc
-
-
-
-
More species and stories
Get to know the neighbours we’re protecting.