Our Partners

Scroll down to explore Wild Green Future's partners and grant recipients!

Partner/Grant Recipient

Alliance for a Sustainable Amazon

Year of Most Recent Project

2025

The Alliance for a Sustainable Amazon’s mission is to conserve the biodiversity and natural resources of the Peruvian Amazon for the benefit of all those who live in and depend on the rainforest. Based in Madre de Dios, they work by combining research and education with community-based conservation, acting as a resource to their neighbors across the region.

They conduct biological research, protect and restore forest habitat, run education programs for university students and local schoolchildren, and create field guides and books to illuminate and spread understanding of Madre de Dios's extremely diverse wildlife.

Wild Green Future has funded many grants to support their work. These include support for the initial creation of their Brazil nut program and construction of the vivero in which seedlings are grown. Funds have also been provided to support staff salaries and infrastructure improvements at the ASA’s field station, Finca las Piedras. This is the sixth year of our organizations’ partnership, and we are excited to continue supporting their excellent work. 

Learn more about the ASA's work in their website, linked here.

Partner/Grant Recipient

Florida Museum of Natural History

Year of Most Recent Project

2025

The Daniels Lab at the Florida Museum of Natural History's McGuire Center for Lepidoptera and Biodiversity is focused on conserving and understanding the ecology of pollinating insects across the southeastern United States and beyond. Their research efforts are directed towards the conservation of particularly vulnerable butterfly species in their natural habitats and the broader pollinator community in urban and suburban environments

Wild Green Future has provided funding to support their efforts to increase native pollinator plants in urban and suburban Florida and to develop husbandry best practices and bolster their captive breeding program for the declining frosted elfin butterfly!​​​

Learn more about the work being done by the Daniels Lab on their website, linked here.

Partner/Grant Recipient

Florida Trail Association

Year of Most Recent Project

2025

The Florida Trail Association is a nonprofit organization that develops, maintains, protects, and promotes the Florida National Scenic Trail and other hiking trails in Florida.

Wild Green Future provided them with a small grant to support the printing of their "Trail Passport", a booklet that provides a fun way for hikers to document their progress and to encourage interaction with the trail's 16 "Gateway Communities".

You can learn more about the Florida Trail Association on their website, linked here.

Partner/Grant Recipient

Bay County Conservancy

Year of Most Recent Project

2024

Founded in 1998, Bay County Conservancy is a land trust dedicated to the preservation of environmentally sensitive lands in Northwest Florida.  Land protection is vital to the future of natural resources in the region, which faces rapid suburban sprawl.  Formed to conserve 30 acres of wetlands in the middle of Panama City, Bay County Conservancy now owns 450 acres in 6 counties of the Florida panhandle, including vital habitat for the federally threatened Panama City crayfish

Wild Green Future has provided Bay County Conservancy with funding to help enhance the trail networks, signage, and wildlife habitats of the King Family and Juniper Headwaters preserves.

Access to nature is essential for human well-being and environmental education. By supporting these trail upgrades, we hope to help the people of Bay County enjoy and protect their incredible natural resources.

Learn more about Bay County Conservancy on their website, linked here.

Partner/Grant Recipient

Ashton Biological Preserve

Year of Most Recent Project

2024

Ashton Biological Preserve is a land and tortoise conservation organization in central Florida. They manage and protect over 100 acres of valuable upland habitat on the preserve itself, and are active in the conservation and management of over 1000 acres in the broader region.

The lands they work on support a number of rare and endangered herpetofauna species, including a healthy population of gopher tortoises, a keystone species in the southeastern US. They also have an active education component to their work, teaching thousands of children in classrooms about the wildlife of their region every year.

Wild Green Future has funded the purchase of a truck and the installation of solar panels on the preserve, facilitating their management and outreach work while helping to provide them with cheaper, more consistent power than would otherwise be available at their remote field station.

Read more about Ashton Biological Preserve's work at their website, linked here.

Caterpillar picture courtesy of Geena Hill. Brazil nut picture courtesy of ASA. Florida Trail picture courtesy of Ash Kusel. Raccoon picture courtesy of Teresa Nooney. Burrowing owl/rainbow picture courtesy of Ashton Biological Preserve. Suwannee River picture credit Richard Barker.