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NFWF Awards $250,000 Grant to the Borderlands Research Institute

Borderlands Research Institute

ALPINE TX – The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation (NFWF) has awarded a $250,000 grant to the Borderlands Research Institute (BRI) for a grassland enhancement project in Marfa and Marathon. The funds will be matched dollar for dollar by private sources including funds from landowners and dollars raised by BRI, doubling the impact of the grant.

In partnership with the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, the project will enhance 6,000 acres of grassland habitat in the Marfa Plateau and Marathon Basin that has been negatively affected by invasive mesquite, creosote, tarbush and whitethorn acacia. These invasive plants can dominate native rangelands, which negatively impact native wildlife, such as pronghorn and grassland birds. Once the affected areas are treated, BRI researchers will monitor response to treatments and develop region-specific science-driven management recommendations. If results indicate positive long-term benefits to pronghorn and grasslands, then a landscape-level brush management program will be developed to improve the desert grassland health throughout the Trans-Pecos region of Texas.

“This project is an extension of our collaborative work with Texas Parks and Wildlife Department and private landowners to better understand and manage grassland habitats,” said Dr. Louis Harveson, who is the Dan Allen Hughes, Jr., BRI Endowed Director and professor of Wildlife Management at Sul Ross State University. “We appreciate NFWF’s support of our work to improve habitat for West Texas wildlife.”

The grant is funded through NFWF’s Pecos Watershed Conservation Initiative, which supports conservation projects in the Pecos River Watershed, which extends from eastern New Mexico into West Texas, and comprises a large portion of the energy-rich Permian Basin. The initiative identifies strategic conservation opportunities and works to enhance and restore the natural resources and wildlife habitat in the region.

“The grasslands of the Trans-Pecos region are an under-appreciated biodiversity hotspot and unfortunately they have dwindled to a small percentage of what they once were in Texas,” said Chris West, director, Rocky Mountain regional office, NFWF. “NFWF and its partners in the Pecos Watershed Conservation Initiative are excited to support this project that will advance the conservation of wildlife and habitat by working with ranchers and biologists across the landscape.”
The Pecos Watershed Conservation Initiative is a partnership between NFWF, Anadarko Petroleum, Chevron, Noble Energy, Occidental Petroleum, Shell Oil Company, XTO Energy Inc., and the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Natural Resources Conservation Service in New Mexico and Texas.