San Francisco harbors a rich cultural ecology of people and organizations healing local nature through habitat restoration, and educating students and adults about our city's natural history and local biodiversity.
From the Presidio to McLaren Park, every week in San Francisco, local citizens, schools, businesses, and other volunteer groups help steward the City's natural lands by getting involved in habitat restoration and stewardship to preserve and grow our native flora, fauna, and fungi.
Habitat restoration gives us the opportunity to connect with nature "in our own backyard."
Explore and restore your neighborhood and help our local nature by removing invasive plants.
Find ecological restoration sites
Click on the screenshot to view the map on Google.
Volunteer work spans the full seasonal cycle of restoration: seed collecting, propagating seedlings in the nursery, planting indigenous species in restoration sites, weeding invasive plants, or monitoring the results of restoration efforts. Stewards help with rare plant and wildlife monitoring, preventing soil erosion, trail construction and maintenance, and engaging the public.
Successful protection and conservation of our natural ecosystem depends upon management and community stewardship of nearby nature. Locally-based community ecological stewardship is the only way we can sustain biodiversity for the long-term; connecting people and nature where we live is inseparable from restoring our natural environment and creating an ecologically sustainable and equitable society.
Our aquatic natural resources are championed by a number of organizations, including:
- Save the Bay
- Farallones Marine Sanctuary Association
- San Francisco Baykeeper
- Toulumne River Trust
- Marine Mammal Center
- Aquarium of the Bay.
Land management agencies
- The Presidio
- Parks Conservancy (more GGNRA Lands in San Francisco)
(Fort Funston, Ocean Beach, Sutro Baths, Land's End) - National Park Service
- SF Natural Areas (RPD)
- State Parks
- Yerba Buena Island
- Port of San Francisco
This program supports the City's ROOTS goal, for healing the planet. Learn more about San Francisco's Climate Action goals at SFClimateAction.org