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Check the Wildlife Checkoff – Georgia Wildlife Blog


We all know tax time is a pain.

But for Georgians, at least filing their state income taxes offers a unique opportunity to give native wildlife a leg – or wing, root, scale or fin – up. And unlike other things involving taxes, the Georgia Wildlife Conservation Fund checkoff is easy-peasy.

DNR’s Robert Lamb with a finelined pocketbook, a federally threatened mussel species (Ani Escobar/DNR)

All you do is:

  • Find the wildlife checkoff at line 10 on Form 500EZ or line 31 of Form 500. State income tax forms and e-filing details are available online.
  • Fill in a donation: Any amount helps.
  • Relax in knowing that your contribution will help conserve native wildlife not legally hunted or fished for – everything from bald eagles to gopher tortoises – plus rare plants and the wildlands these plants and animals need.

DNR’s Wildlife Conservation Section leads this work and depends on grants, donations and contributions. The Give Wildlife a Chance checkoff has been a key source of support since state lawmakers created it and what’s officially called the Nongame Wildlife Conservation and Habitat Acquisition Fund some 35 years ago.

The checkoff made up 9 percent of revenue in the last fiscal year. For more on what your giving goes to, see Conserving Georgia’s Wildlife in 2024.

Crew after collecting seed from endangered Alabama leatherflower for "seed banking" (DNR)

Alabama leatherflower seed-collection crew, part of an effort to conserve and restore the endangered plant in northwest Georgia (DNR)

Top: Nesting anhinga and a defensive wood stork at Harris Neck National Wildlife Refuge near Townsend (Jimmy Cash/Georgia Nature Photographers Association)





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