Habitat One

Arkansas

Cost Share Opportunities and Options

Audubon Conservation Ranching (ACR)

Audubon’s Conservation Ranching (ACR) program partners with ranchers to maintain native grasslands and bird-friendly habitat. Participating ranches commit to sustainable land stewardship practices that protect habitat for grassland birds, pollinators, and other wildlife. Supporting Audubon-certified beef and bison helps incentivize habitat conservation at the ranch scale.

Website

audubon.org/our-work/prairies-and-forests/ranching

DU Conservation Programs

The Prairie Pothole Region is critical to Arkansas waterfowl hunters. The vast majority of Arkansas’ annual duck harvest migrates from the Prairie Pothole Region, also referred to as “the duck factory” and DU’s #1 conservation focus area. Arkansas also benefits from DU’s Mississippi Alluvial Valley conservation work, continuing to conserve critical waterfowl habitat in the Natural State. Ducks Unlimited has conserved 370,487 acres in Arkansas with 25,728 members.

Website

ducks.org/arkansas

Conservation Reserve Program (CRP)

The Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) provides annual rental payments and cost-share assistance (up to 50%) to landowners who establish approved conservation cover – such as native grasses, trees, riparian buffers, or pollinator habitat – on eligible cropland. Continuous CRP signup for high-priority practices is available year-round through local FSA county offices.

Contact Information

Contact your local county office for more information.

Website

fsa.usda.gov/state-offices/Arkansas

Free Food Plot Seed

To help ensure wildlife have access to adequate nutrition during these challenging conditions, Habitat One has established a Free Food Plot Seed Program. This program is designed to assist landowners in providing reliable winter food and cover for wildlife through the establishment of dedicated food plots.

Contact

Brooke Fricke, Operations and Administration Manager | Phone: 308-362-7061 | Email: brooke@habitat-one.org

Private Lands Program

The Mule Deer Foundation (MDF) is dedicated to restoring, improving, and protecting habitat for mule deer, black-tailed deer, and other wildlife. MDF works with hunters, landowners, and wildlife agencies to fund conservation projects, support research, and advocate for sound wildlife management policies in Arkansas.

Website

muledeer.org/states/arkansas

Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP)

EQIP provides financial and technical assistance to agricultural producers to address natural resource concerns and deliver environmental benefits, including wildlife habitat improvement. Eligible practices include prescribed grazing, brush management, native grass and forb establishment, wetland restoration, and pollinator habitat. EQIP also offers Conservation Incentive Contracts (CIC), which provide additional incentive payments for ongoing management of priority resource concerns, including wildlife habitat.

Payment Rates

Cost-share rates vary by practice and are set annually by the state NRCS office. Many wildlife habitat practices are eligible for enhanced incentive payments through EQIP-CIC.

Contact Information

Contact your local county office for more information.

Website

nrcs.usda.gov/contact/state-office-contacts/arkansas-state-office

Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP)

CSP rewards producers who maintain and improve existing conservation systems and adopt additional conservation activities to address priority resource concerns – including wildlife habitat enhancement – on working agricultural land and non-industrial private forest land.

Payment Rates

Annual payments are based on the conservation performance of the producer’s entire operation, with enhanced payments available for installing new conservation activities.

Contact Information

Contact your local county office for more information.

Website

nrcs.usda.gov/contact/state-office-contacts/arkansas-state-office

Conservation Incentive Program (CIP)

The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission’s Conservation Incentive Program, administered by the Private Lands Habitat Division, provides eligible landowners up to $20,000 to be reimbursed for management practices that promote native wildlife habitat. Eligible practices include timber stand improvement (reimbursed at $200/acre), prescribed burning ($50/acre), and invasive tree removal ($200/acre), with a minimum of 10 acres of habitat manipulation required for reimbursement.

Acres for Wildlife Program

Landowners can also apply for up to $15,000 in cost-share incentives through the Acres for Wildlife program for habitat improvement projects on private land.

Technical Assistance

AGFC private lands biologists provide written wildlife management plans and aerial photos identifying recommended habitat practices, and can direct landowners to other applicable cost-share programs.

Website

agfc.com/privatelands

Pheasants Forever Habitat Programs

Pheasants Forever and Quail Forever chapters in Arkansas work with landowners on habitat improvement projects, including upland bird habitat restoration, food plots, and native grass and forb plantings. Pheasants Forever Habitat Specialists also provide free technical assistance to help landowners enroll in Farm Bill conservation programs and design wildlife habitat projects.

Website

pheasantsforever.org

Habitat Enhancement Grant Program

Since 1984, Arkansas-based fundraising has generated over $7.3 million for Elk Foundation habitat work, with more than $770,000 returned to conservation and education projects within the state, including 37 completed projects. RMEF-funded efforts in Arkansas include elk habitat research in the Glass Mountains of West Arkansas and youth conservation education programs across the state.

Website

rmef.org/how-we-conserve/grant-program

Partners for Fish and Wildlife Program

The Arkansas Partners for Fish and Wildlife Program provides free technical and financial assistance to landowners, managers, tribes, corporations, schools, and nonprofits interested in restoring wetland, riparian, and upland wildlife habitat. A phone call or email to the state coordinator is all it takes to schedule an initial site visit.

Contact Information

Cyndee Watson, State Coordinator | (512) 490-0057 | Cyndee_Watson@fws.gov

Website

fws.gov/program/partners-fish-and-wildlife/contact-us