Wilderness

Green plains and a lake with a mountain range in the background.

Explore Wilderness Areas

Wilderness areas are wild, undeveloped, federally protected areas where you can see wildlife in its natural habitat, enjoy adventure and unmechanized recreation, or just relish solitude. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service manages more than 20 million acres of Congressionally designated wilderness — about one-fifth of all the designated wilderness in the nation. 

About Wilderness Areas

Refuge wilderness areas contribute valuable wetlands, coastal islands and deserts to the National Wilderness Preservation System, in which the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Bureau of Land Management, the U.S. Forest Service and the National Park Service conserve designated wilderness. National wildlife refuges allow visitors to explore wilderness without motor vehicles, motorized equipment or mechanical transport such as bicycles. Some refuges may limit public use to protect wildlife and its habitat.

 

Proposed Wilderness Areas

An area becomes proposed wilderness when the Secretary of the Interior recommends to the president that it be designated as wilderness and included as part of the National Wilderness Preservation System, and the president transmits a proposal to that effect to Congress.  

The Refuge System manages proposed wilderness the same way it does designated wilderness; It manages these areas to preserve their wilderness character. This maintains Congress’s authority to designate these areas as wilderness in the future, should it choose to do so.    

Of the 14 million acres of proposed Refuge System wilderness, 12 million are in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.