Minnesota graveyards are crowded with conservation champions, many of them little-known because they were women, American Indians, African-Americans or members of other races or ethnicities whose work occurred outside the state's environmentalist mainstream.
Indeed, while Minnesota rightly tallies among its all-star conservationists a lot of dead white guys, deserving of such recognition as well are many residents who are very much alive, among them increasing numbers of women and people of color.
Count among these Thurman Tucker, 76, whose sincere interest in Minnesota's wild places and wild critters during the last half-century is unparalleled.
Born in Memphis and raised in Mississippi, Tucker, a self-described "quail nut,'' moved to Minnesota in 1965 and in the years since has made countless solo journeys to southeast Minnesota hoping to spot, if only fleetingly, a bobwhite quail.
Tucker also formed a conservation organization, the Bobwhite Quail Society of Minnesota, which has since been folded into the national group, Quail Forever. Twice a year he helps organize well-attended quail-habitat banquets in the southeast and in the metro.
And while the racially charged confrontation between a black birder and a white woman on May 25 in New York City's Central Park underscores the discomfort and even fear some black people and other minorities feel while recreating outdoors, Tucker said his experiences have been positive.
"Even in rural southeast Minnesota, where I obviously was of a different race and from a different place, and people might have thought, 'Where did this guy come from?' I never had any adverse situations,'' Tucker said.
Minnesota's overwhelmingly white (84%) population is fast becoming more diverse, with significant implications for outdoor recreation and especially for conservation.