http://www.fws.gov/news/NewsReleases/showNews.cfm?newsId=E90E11C2-B903-57BA-5493702D245298E5
State Wildlife Agencies Receive
Grants to Work With Landowners to Conserve At-risk
Species
NEWS RELEASE: Fish and Wildlife Service 8/8/06
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The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service announced nearly
$19 million in competitive funding for 37 States and
Puerto Rico and U.S. Virgin Islands fish and
wildlife agencies under the Bush Administration's
innovative Landowner Incentive Program (LIP). The
program supports cooperative efforts with private
landowners interested in conserving natural habitat
for species at risk, including Federally listed
endangered or threatened species and proposed or
candidate species.
"Conservation, especially conservation of imperiled
species, must be a partnership between the American
people and their government," said Interior
Secretary Dirk Kempthorne. "By providing these
grants, we empower citizens to restore habitat on
their land and take other steps to protect and
recover endangered, threatened and at-risk species."
LIP, funded through competitive grants with money
from the Land and Water Conservation Fund,
establishes or supplements existing landowner
incentive programs that provide technical or
financial assistance to private landowners. All
grants need to be matched by at least 25 percent
from a non-Federal source.
Landowners interested in participating in LIP should
contact their State fish and wildlife agency. For
more information about the grant programs, please
visit http://federalaid.fws.gov/lip/lip.html. The
Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance reference
number is 15.633.
A brief summary of the projects follows:
The Alabama Game and Fish Department will receive
$856,750 and match $424,646 to help restore 115
species of special concern and 34 federally listed
aquatic and cave species found in the Middle
Tennessee River drainage. The specific project area
includes Fern Cave which is the largest hibernaculum
for endangered gray bats as well as thousands of
other caves that harbor at least 24 cave dependent
species found only in this project area. The Paint
Rock River, where much of the aquatic restoration
will occur, contains 98 species of freshwater fishes
and 58 species of mussels. The project will work
with private landowners to stabilize stream banks,
restore bottomland hardwoods and riparian areas,
exclude livestock from streams, construct fish
passage, and install gates at the entrance to caves.
The Alaska Department of Fish and Game will receive
nearly $180,000 and match $60,000. These funds will
provide technical support, outreach and coordination
to assist private landowners and their conservation
partners to benefit at-risk fish and wildlife
species on private lands.
The Arizona Game and Fish Department will receive
nearly $946,000 and match nearly $491,000 to provide
private landowners with the technical assistance
necessary to develop habitat projects benefiting
species-at-risk. Proposed projects include the
conservation of riparian and grassland habitats on
private lands throughout Arizona.
The Colorado Division of Wildlife will receive
nearly $946,000 and match $945,760 to provide
financial support for private landowner projects to
protect and manage wildlife habitat on private lands
for species-at-risk. The LIP program focus areas
will include the Gunnison Basin, Front Range
Riparian Corridors, and short-grass prairie in the
central and southeastern portion of the state.
Conservation easements and habitat restoration work
will be pursued to benefit species-at-risk that
include Gunnison sage grouse, Preble's meadow
jumping mouse, mountain plover, burrowing owl,
Ferruginous hawk, greater sage grouse, lesser
prairie chicken and other associated shortgrass
prairie species.
The Connecticut Department of Environmental
Protection will receive $180,000 and match $60,000
to provide private landowners technical assistance
to manage, restore and protect habitat for at-risk
species on their land.
The Delaware Division of Fish and Wildlife will
receive $180,000 and match $60,000 to provide
private landowners technical assistance to manage,
restore and protect habitat for at-risk species on
their land.
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation
Commission will receive $180,000 and match $60,000
to help 149 landowners in managing habitat on their
land.
The Idaho Department of Fish and Game will receive
nearly $946,000 and match more than $472,000 to
provide private landowners with technical support to
develop habitat projects on private land and benefit
at-risk species in the Upper Henrys Fork, Bear River
Basin, and Palouse Prairie by removing fish barriers
and controlling invasive plants on private lands.
The Illinois Department of Natural Resources will
receive nearly $946,000 and match nearly $491,000 to
continue work in the Lower Sangamon River Watershed
and will expand into the Alton Bluffs area near St.
Louis. Proposed projects will include hill prairie
restoration, invasive species control, timber stand
improvement and restoration of prairies, wetlands,
forests and streams.
The Indiana Division of Fish and Wildlife will
receive $180,000 and match $60,000 to conserve more
than 100 species of concern. In past years,
biologists developed best management practices for
species as diverse as the blue-spotted salamander,
Kirtland's snake, the northern cave fish, and the
spotted darter. Now this new grant money will be
used to recruit landowners interested in
implementing these practices on their property. The
agency expects to work with more than 700 landowners
through the life of this grant.
The Iowa Department of Natural Resources will
receive $180,000 and match $60,000 to implement
monitoring protocols developed and approved through
the Iowa Wildlife Action Plan. It is important that
monitoring approaches are expanded and refined by
gathering baseline data and standardizing protocols.
The Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks will
receive $680,000 and match $226,000 to provide
private landowners with technical support to
implement projects in the Shortgrass Prairie
Conservation Region and the Central Mixed Grass
Prairie Conservation Region identified in their
Wildlife Action Plan. At-risk-species to benefit
from habitat enhancement and restoration work
include lesser prairie chicken, black-tailed prairie
dog, Ferruginous hawk, northern pintail, American
avocet, black tern, Cassin's sparrow, whooping
crane, green toad, flathead chub, Arkansas darter,
and Topeka shiner.
The Kentucky Department of Fish and Wildlife
Resources will receive $180,000 and match $60,000 to
further supply landowner assistance and provide
necessary administrative expenditures.
The Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and
Wildlife will receive nearly $946,000 and match
$545,000 to provide land trusts and private
landowners technical assistance to manage, restore
and protect habitat for at-risk species on their
land and to purchase permanent conservation
easements to protect 1,000 acres of habitat for at
least 15 at-risk species on private lands in
southern and coastal Maine.
The Maryland Department of Natural Resources will
receive $945,000 and match $320,000 to provide
private landowners with technical assistance to
manage, restore and protect habitat involving
at-risk species on their land for 137 plant and 138
animal species considered at-risk throughout
Maryland. Proposed restoration activities include
establishment of riparian buffers, reforestation,
invasive species control, fencing and restoration of
wetlands.
The Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife
will receive $180,000 and match $60,000 to provide
private landowners with technical assistance to
manage, restore and protect habitat for at-risk
species on their land.
The Michigan Department of Natural Resources will
receive nearly $946,000 and match $404,038 to
provide private landowners with technical support to
develop habitat projects on private land in the
southern grasslands and wetlands, northern pine
barrens and jack pine forests, and northern
conifers. Proposed projects include invasive species
removal, prescribed fire, restoring hydrology, and
planting native vegetation.
The Minnesota Division of Fish and Wildlife will
receive $108,488 and match $36,163 to continue and
expand work in the prairie, bluffland and Southeast
forest habitat areas.
The Mississippi Department of Wildlife, Fisheries,
and Parks will receive $180,000 and match $60,000 to
coordinate with numerous partners who will develop
conservation easements, conduct prescribed burning,
repair riparian corridors, and restore longleaf pine
ecosystems. These activities are expected to benefit
196 at-risk species. Additional outreach efforts to
landowners will include field days, workshops,
brochures, broadcasts and public presentations.
Previous LIP funding was used to develop a
bottomland hardwood restoration handbook.
Mississippi employs a full time LIP coordinator and
a project supervisor to implement the program.
The Missouri Department of Conservation will receive
$180,000 and match $60,000 to expand the private
land conservation component of the Department's
endangered species program.
The Montana Fish, Wildlife, and Parks Department
will receive $180,000 and match $60,000 to identify
priority habitat restoration needs for sagebrush
grassland and Big Hole habitats and then to provide
technical assistance, outreach, and coordination to
landowners to help restore and protect those
habitats on their lands.
The Nebraska Game and Parks Commission will receive
$945,000 and match $501,250 to implement projects on
biologically unique landscapes identified in their
Legacy Plan that will benefit at-risk species which
include Massasauga rattlesnake, Greater prairie
chicken, Henslow's sparrow, regal fritillary
butterfly, western prairie fringed orchid, American
burying beetle, whooping crane, long-bract green
orchid, wild sarsaparilla and Iowa moonwort.
The Nevada Department of Wildlife will receive
nearly $617,000 and match $305,700 to provide
technical and financial incentives to evaluate,
protect, and restore habitat for at-risk species on
privately-owned lands. Nevada will focus this year
on aquatic and riparian habitats, implementation of
existing Conservation and Safe Harbor Agreements and
small grant opportunities for habitat restoration
projects not part of a larger program emphasis.
The New Hampshire Fish and Game Department will
receive nearly $946,000 and match $765,254 to
provide land trusts and private landowners with
technical assistance to manage, restore and protect
habitat for at-risk species on their land, to
purchase permanent conservation easements on 1,000
acres and restore 500 acres of priority habitat for
at least 20 at-risk species in New Hampshire.
The New Jersey Endangered and Nongame Species
Program will receive nearly $946,000 and match
$329,051 to restore and maintain 1,000 acres of
grasslands for at-risk bird species, protect
roosting habitat for the Federally endangered
Indiana bat, manage habitat for the Federally
threatened bog turtle, and protect and manage vernal
pools on private lands in New Jersey.
The New Mexico Department of Game and Fish will
receive $180,000 and match $60,000 to provide
private landowners with the technical assistance
necessary to develop habitat projects benefiting
species-at-risk.
The New York State Department of Environmental
Conservation will receive $180,000 and match $60,000
to provide private landowners with technical
assistance to manage, restore and protect habitat
for at-risk species on their land.
The Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation
will receive $180,000 and match $60,000 to provide
private landowners with the technical assistance
necessary to develop habitat projects benefiting
species-at-risk.
The Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife will
receive nearly $946,000 and match $315,254 to focus
on projects in the East Cascades and Willamette
Valley in ponderosa pine, oak woodland savanna,
riparian, wetland, and freshwater aquatic habitats.
The Pennsylvania Game Commission and Pennsylvania
Fish and Boat Commission will receive $180,000 and
match $60,000 to provide private landowners
technical assistance to manage, restore and protect
habitat for at-risk species on their land.
The Puerto Rico Department of Natural Resources will
receive $75,000 and match $43,694 to provide the
needed funds to focus some existing partnerships on
needs for species of special concern.
The Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency will receive
more than $945,000 and match $358,461 to address the
State's rich cave resources that house two federally
listed species, 6 candidates for listing, and 29
species of special concern. Last year, researchers
identified 9 cave species that were new to science.
Aquatic resources to be addressed include 59 at risk
species. Proposed cooperative actions with private
landowners include livestock exclusion, shoreline
restoration and protection, creation of riparian
buffers and hardened stream access. Cave protection
activities include cave entrance barriers, waste
removal from sinkholes and vegetated buffer zones.
The Texas Parks and Wildlife Department will receive
$180,000 and match $60,000 to provide private
landowners with the technical assistance necessary
to develop habitat projects benefiting
species-at-risk.
The U.S. Virgin Islands Division of Fish and
Wildlife will receive $75,000 to address a variety
of endangered and threatened species found on
private lands. The Nature Conservancy will assist
the agency with planned activities.
The Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries
will receive $180,000 and match $60,000 to provide
private landowners with technical assistance to
manage, restore and protect habitat for at-risk
species on their land.
The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife will
receive nearly $946,000 and match more than $404,000
to focus its LIP projects on shrub steppe habitat
surrounding pygmy rabbit reintroduction sites,
wetlands, riparian, and riverine habitats, as well
as a variety of small projects, to benefit at-risk
species. Proposed projects on private land include
installing artificial burrows for pygmy rabbits,
removing the invasive non-native rodent nutria in
wetlands, and replacing undersized culverts in
streams.
The West Virginia Division of Natural Resources will
receive $180,000 and match $60,000 to provide
private landowners technical assistance to manage,
restore and protect habitat for at-risk species on
their land.
The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources will
receive $68,761 and match $22,921 to work with
private landowners on habitats in the prairie and
savannah habitat areas as well as in the northern
Lake Michigan coastal ecological landscape.
The Wyoming Game and Fish Department will receive
$945,000 and match $1,583,000 to provide private
landowners with technical support to benefit at-risk
species on private land. Funds will also enable
coordination with private landowners to establish on
the ground LIP projects. Wyoming will focus on
projects throughout the State's grasslands,
sagebrush, and prairie aquatic habitats. At risk
species to benefit from habitat enhancement and
restoration work include black-tailed prairie dogs,
swift fox, burrowing owls, upland sandpipers,
greater sage grouse, brewer's sparrow, sage sparrow,
shovelnose sturgeon, flathead chub, plains minnow
and silvery minnow.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is the principal
Federal agency responsible for conserving,
protecting and enhancing fish, wildlife and plants
and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the
American people. The Service manages the
95-million-acre National Wildlife Refuge System,
which encompasses 545 national wildlife refuges,
thousands of small wetlands and other special
management areas. It also operates 69 national fish
hatcheries, 64 fishery resources offices and 81
ecological services field stations. The agency
enforces federal wildlife laws, administers the
Endangered Species Act, manages migratory bird
populations, restores nationally significant
fisheries, conserves and restores wildlife habitat
such as wetlands, and helps foreign and Native
American tribal governments with their conservation
efforts. It also oversees the Federal Assistance
program, which distributes hundreds of millions of
dollars in excise taxes on fishing and hunting
equipment to state fish and wildlife agencies.
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