Wildlife Habitat

Montana provides habitat for 109 mammals, 456 birds, 15 bat species, and over 90 fish species with 226 of these animals being species of concern and 59 having special status (rare, threatened or endangered). With around 23% of Montana's forests being on private land, private land owners play a large role in providing habitat for wildlife. There are many ways to improve and maintain wildlife habitat on your property, including managing for specific wildlife species or managing for wildfire risk with wildlife in mind. How you choose to manage wildlife habitat on your forest will depend on your goals as a forest landowner.  

Resources are provided below to assist you with managing habitat on your forest land.

Wildlife Identification

Montana natural heritage program logo with illustration of bird

The Montana Natural Heritage Program (MNHP) Animal Field Guide provides detailed information on distribution, status, and ecology of Montana's animals.

Visit MNHP Animals Field Guide

Cornell lab of ornithology logo with illustration of black and yellow bird

All About Birds through the Cornell Lab of Ornithology offers an Online Guide to Birds with a link to download their Merlin ID app. 

Visit Cornell Lab's Online Bird Guide

iNaturalist logo

Through iNaturalist you can submit photos and recordings of species you do not know to a community of naturalist and experts for identification and to maintain a log of wildlife and plant sightings on your property.

Visit iNaturalist

montana FWP logo with illustration of grizzly bear

Montana Fish, Wildlife, & Park's Wildlife Wednesday Videos go over various wildlife species across Montana through short, fun videos. 

View the Wildlife Wednesday Video Series

Forests as Habitat

Additional Resources

Habitat Management 

Wildlife Conflict & Damage

Below are links to resources to assist private landowners with preventing and reducing wildlife damage and conflict.