
New Master Naturalist members Jerricho Jonker and Jacob Mace learn the protocol for monitoring Barn Owl nesting boxes from senior volunteers with Hi Lonesome Chapter and landowner Susan Lorde Marker.
Volunteers provided more than 75,000 hours of service to local communities in 2024.
The Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC) and MU Extension thank the Missouri Master Naturalists for volunteering thousands of hours to conserving Missouri’s natural resources in 2024.
Missouri Master Naturalists participate in a chapter-based natural resource education and volunteer program within their community that is sponsored by MDC and MU Extension. They sometimes assist with MDC research or conduct habitat improvement projects, but they often serve at educational or special-event programs that are conducted with numerous chapter partners within the community.
Participants first must enroll in a core training with approximately 40 hours that is focused on Missouri’s ecological systems and conservation. Core training is conducted at the chapter-level and led by chapter advisors with both MDC and MU Extension. Master Naturalist chapters provide a corps of well-informed volunteers to serve nature and natural resources in their community.
According to Bob Pierce, Program Coordinator with MU Extension, there are 12 Missouri Master Naturalist Program chapters: Boone’s Lick in Columbia, Chert Glades in Joplin, Confluence in St. Charles, Great Rivers in St. Louis, Hi Lonesome in Cole Camp, Lake of the Ozarks in Camdenton, Loess Hills in St. Joseph, Meramec Hills in Rolla, Miramiguoa in Washington, Mississippi Hills in Hannibal, Osage Trails in Kansas City, and Springfield Plateau in Springfield.
2024 PROGRAM SNAPSHOTS
Rebecca O’Hearn, MDC Program Coordinator for Missouri Master Naturalists, reports that during 2024, the Missouri Master Naturalist Program celebrated its 20th year of programming. One of Missouri’s very first chapters, the Boone’s Lick Chapter, hosted a successful Statewide Conference in the Columbia area to commemorate the anniversary.
In addition, 11 of the 12 Master Naturalist Chapters trained more than 230 new volunteers, and the Program’s volunteers dedicated record numbers of service hours to taking care of Missouri’s natural resources and to educating Missourians about those resources.









