NRCS sets application deadline for Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program
Little Rock, Ark., March 16, 2004 -- The Natural Resources Conservation Service
announced today the sign-ups for its Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program
continue through April 2.2004 funding totals $660,000 for WHIP in Arkansas.
Last year’s funding totaled $521,000.
The program addresses riparian, wetlands, uplands and cave ecosystems; and
elk and quail habitat. Each area will have specific conservation practices
eligible for cost-sharing that benefit certain wildlife species.
Applicants will be ranked according to how the wildlife habitat
development plan will effect certain wildlife populations. The plans will be
developed by the landowner with assistance from an Arkansas Game and Fish
Commission biologist and NRCS conservationist. The plans will be implemented
during a long-term agreement that generally lasts from five to 10 years from the
date the agreement is signed.
A wildlife habitat development plan outlines management practices as well as
establishment practices such as planting and seeding. Plans include practices to
manage plant succession in fields and forests and may prescribe management
techniques such as burning, disking and mowing herbaceous stands.
Plans may also include forest management practices such as forest stand
improvement by herbicide treatment and harvesting small groups of trees to
create the proper density, composition and age of the stand for different
wildlife species. On wetland areas, plans outline dates and rates of water
drawdown to encourage different species of annual native plants for waterfowl
and shorebirds.
The Wildlife Habitat Incentives Program is a voluntary program for people who
want to develop and improve wildlife habitat primarily on private land.
WHIP has proven to be a highly effective and widely accepted program across
the country. The Farm Security and Rural Investment Act of 2002 reauthorized
WHIP as a voluntary approach to improving wildlife habitat in our nation.
Landowners may sign up for the program at their local USDA field service
center.
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