The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation (NFWF) is soliciting proposals for projects that enhance and improve the quality of state-identified, or tribal-identified, priority big game habitat, stopover areas, and migration corridors on federal land and/or voluntary efforts on private and tribal land.
Donor Name: National Fish and Wildlife Foundation (NFWF)
States: Arizona, California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and Wyoming
County: All Counties
Type of Grant: Grant
Deadline (mm/dd/yyyy): 11/08/2022
Grant Size: $1.7 million
Grant Duration: 3 years
Details:
Program Priorities
All proposals must outline specifically how projects will directly address state game and fish (wildlife) department priorities as identified in the state plans, or specific priority projects on tribal lands, to conserve or restore habitat and measurably contribute to the sustainability of local and regional big-game populations and accomplishment of program priorities which include:
- Restoring degraded priority habitat, stopover areas, and migration corridors by activities identified in the state plans, or comparable tribal plans, such as removing encroaching trees from sagebrush ecosystems, rehabilitating areas damaged by fire, or treating exotic/invasive vegetation to improve the quality and value of these areas to big game and other wildlife.
- Work cooperatively with diverse partners to achieve wild-life friendly fencing measures, including potentially modifying (via smooth wire), removing (if no longer necessary), installing if serving to direct big game movement out of harm’s way, or seasonally adapting (seasonal lay down) fencing if proven to impede movement of big game through priority migration corridors or habitat.
- Implement measures such as conservation easements and management agreements or other actions to protect bottlenecks within corridors and other areas within priority habitat or stopover areas threatened by fragmentation.
- Utilize other proven actions necessary to improve the habitat quality /or restore priority big-game habitat, stopover areas, or migration corridors across the West.
- In 2023 there are additional resources available for capacity to increase conservation delivery in Wyoming. Projects seeking capacity support must show how it will translate into habitat outcomes on-the-ground and are still required to fall within Tribally or State-identified priority areas.