Grants Library

The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation supports vital conservation projects across the United States and its territories. Please search our grants library for additional information on individual grants.

Year Name Organization Location Award Amount
2017 Russian River Streamflow Improvement Projects Trout Unlimited, Inc. Russian River watershed, Sonoma County, California, United States, North America $500,000.00
2017 Hawaii Island Early Detection, Rapid Response Youth Conservation Team University of Hawaii - Manoa Island of Hawaii $48,570.27
2017 Caldera’s Natural Resource Stewards Program (OR) Caldera Newberry National Volcanic Monument and Sisters Ranger District of the Deschutes National Forest in Central Oregon $10,114.37
2017 Advancing Black-footed Ferret Recovery through Innovative Aerial and Ground-based Delivery of Sylvatic Plague Vaccine Baits to Prairie Dogs World Wildlife Fund, Inc. U.L. Bend National Wildlife Refuge, Montana; Wind Cave National Park, South Dakota; Badlands National Park, South Dakota; and Bad River Ranches, South Dakota. $75,000.00
2017 The Journey to Thirty Breeding Adult Black-footed Ferrets at Fort Belknap Fort Belknap Indian Community The Snake Butte Black-footed Ferret Reintroduction Area on the Fort Belknap Reservation in Blaine and Phillips Counties of Montana. $209,109.02
2017 ABN Ranch The Montana Land Reliance Chouteau County, Montana $162,500.00
2017 Fort Stewart/Altamaha Longleaf Partnership: Incorporating Private Landowners to Achieve Conservation Success The Longleaf Alliance, Inc. The Ft. Stewart/Altamaha Longleaf Partnership is approximately 5 mil. acres, in SE GA. The SGA is anchored on the west by Little Ocmulgee SP and runs east along the Altamaha River to the coast. It includes Ft. Stewart and Townsend BR and several DNR WMAs as well as private nature preserves. $300,000.00
2017 Assessment Monitoring of Tamarisk Treatment - Cuyama River Watershed Social and Environmental Entrepreneurs The Cuyama River project area is 49 miles north of Ventura on Hwy. 33, west of the intersection Highway 33 and Lockwood Valley Road. Rancho Nuevo Creek and Deal Canyon are tributaries of the Cuyama River, which lie to the west of the Cuyama in the western-most portion of the Dick Smith Wilderness. $25,000.20
2017 Increasing Tree Canopy in the City of Lancaster (PA) City of Lancaster Two acres of riparian buffers along the Conestoga River City of Lancaster, Pennsylvania $31,650.00
2017 Community-Based Habitat Restoration along the Fall Creek Waterway (IN) Keep Indianapolis Beautiful, Inc. 20 acres of the Fall Creek Waterway in Indianapolis, Indiana $47,509.75