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Eligible Entities
Invasive Species Program (BIA)
Due Date: January 16, 2024 | Award: $200,000
Planning, prevention, or implementation to manage invasive species impacts on Tribal natural resources (leaves it to the discretion of the applicant to describe a) whether the species is “invasive” or represents an instance in which a native species is behaving as an invasive species due to altered environmental conditions. b) whether the damage is occurring in an agricultural setting – or – a more general, non-agricultural setting.)
Endangered Species Program (BIA)
Due Date: January 16, 2024 | Award: $120,000
The Branch of Fisheries, Wildlife and Recreation (BFWR) provides competitive funding to achieve compliance with Section 7 of the Endangered Species Act (ESA) for Tribal projects developing, utilizing, or managing Trust resources, or for projects that benefit Federally ESA-listed or Tribally-significant species on Tribal lands.
Projects for the BFWR Endangered Species Program may encompass either endangered species as identified in the ESA or Tribally-significant species as identified in a Tribal document, management plan, or Tribal Resolution. Priority consideration will be given to projects achieving ESA compliance and approval to utilize Trust resources for subsistence, economic, or other purposes beneficial to the applicant.
Tribal Youth Initiative (BIA)
Due Date: January 16, 2024 | Award: $50,000
The Branch of Fisheries, Wildlife and Recreation (BFWR) provides competitive funding to federally-recognized Tribes and Tribal Organizations’ programs to engage Tribal youth in natural resource management work and prepare them for careers related to fisheries, wildlife and outdoor recreation.
National Coastal Resilience Fund
Due Date: April 10, 2024 | Award: $10,000,000
NFWF will make investments in planning, design, and implementation of natural and nature-based solutions. The goal is to enhance protection for coastal communities from the impacts of storms, floods, and other natural coastal hazards and to improve habitats for fish and wildlife. NFWF will award approximately $140 million in grants to create and restore natural systems to increase protection for communities from current and future coastal hazards and improve habitats for fish and wildlife species.
Network for Landscape Conservation: Catalyst Fund
Due Date: May 3, 2024 | Award: $
The Catalyst Fund strives to accelerate the pace and practice of collaborative landscape conservation and stewardship across the United States by investing in Landscape Partnerships. The Fund couples financial support (through a competitive grant program) with capacity[1]building support (through in-depth Peer Learning) to catalyze Partnership efforts to achieve long-term conservation and stewardship goals. A portion of the Fund is reserved specifically to advance Tribal-led Partnerships. MATCH IS WAIVED FOR TRIBAL-LED PARTNERSHIPS!
Implementation of the Quagga and Zebra Mussel Action Plan (QZAP) in the Western United States
Due Date: May 15, 2024 | Award: $600,000
Quagga and Zebra Mussels are aquatic invasive species that are rapidly expanding their range in the Western United States. Popular recreational reservoirs on or connected to the lower Colorado River are one major source of invasive mussels, which are easily transported via trailered watercraft to areas that have not yet been invaded. This Request For Proposals (RFP) will fund proposals in the listed principal areas towards the fulfillment of the top priorities in the Quagga/Zebra Mussel Action Plan for Western U.S. Waters (QZAP 2.0) and will be limited to states within the boundaries of the Western Regional Panel within the United States, not including Canada and Mexico (see map).
National Environmental Information Exchange Network Grant Program
Due Date: May 23, 2024 | Award: $500,000
The EPA Exchange Network Grant Program is soliciting project applications to support the Environmental Information Exchange Network (EN) to:
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- Facilitate sharing of environmental data, especially through shared and reusable services.
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- Reduce burden and avoid costs for co-regulators and the regulated community.
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- Streamline data collection and exchanges to improve its timeliness for decision making.
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- Increase the quality and access to environmental data through discovery, publishing, outbound and analytical services so it is more useful to environmental managers.
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- Increase data and IT management capabilities needed to fully participate in the EN.
Invasive Species Eradication Funding Opportunity (USFWS)
Due Date: May 27, 2024 | Award: $1,000,000
USFWS invites proposals to support the eradication of a newly introduced or established species in terrestrial or aquatic habitats of the United States, including the U.S. territories (aquatic habitats include freshwater, wetland, riparian, estuarian, and marine). While preference will be given to proposals that result in eradication of invasive species, research proposals that advance research that increases the effectiveness and availability of eradication tools will be considered
Wild Cervid CWD Funding Opportunity (National)
Due Date: June 10, 2024 | Award: $250,000
APHIS anticipates awarding around $5.5 million to control and prevent chronic wasting disease (CWD) in wild cervids. Funded projects will allow recipients to further develop and carry out CWD management and response activities in line with the following priorities:
- Improving CWD management of affected wild cervid populations
- Improving CWD management of affected areas or premises
- Conducting additional research on amplification assays and other new test methods
- Conduct research on developing and/or applying predictive genetics for wild cervids
- Developing and/or delivering educational outreach materials or programs
Rapid Response Fund for Aquatic Invasive Species
Due Date: July 15, 2024 | Award: $960000
The Rapid Response Fund addresses the need for readily available financial resources to assess and support response actions for quick containment or eradication of newly detected species. For the purposes of this Federal Rapid Response Fund, “Rapid Response” is defined as a process employed to eradicate the founding population of non-native, potentially invasive, species in a specific location before that species begins to reproduce or spreads so widely that eradication is no longer feasible. Eradication is defined as the removal or destruction of an entire population of an invasive species within a specified area.