USDA Invests $17 Million in Partnerships to Restore Wetlands, Support Underserved Producers
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) is investing $17 million in five Wetland Reserve Enhancement Partnership (WREP) projects, bringing together partners and landowners in a joint effort to return critical wetland functions to agricultural landscapes.
WASHINGTON, May 11, 2023 – The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) is investing $17 million in five Wetland Reserve Enhancement Partnership (WREP) projects, bringing together partners and landowners in a joint effort to return critical wetland functions to agricultural landscapes. Through WREP, conservation partners and agricultural producers will work with USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) to support broader efforts to mitigate climate change by restoring wetlands while also prioritizing assistance to underserved communities.
“Through partnerships, we can accomplish so much more,” NRCS Chief Terry Cosby said. “This year, NRCS focused our investments on projects that support underserved landowners who face significant barriers in accessing USDA conservation assistance programs. Our partners provide a direct link to these communities, and we appreciate their help in helping us conserve America’s wetlands. All year, but especially during America’s Wetlands Month, we recognize wetlands’ many benefits, from flood prevention to carbon sequestration, and from wildlife habitat to recreation.”
NRCS is funding five proposals that prioritize high-impact projects and assistance to underserved farmers and ranchers, through five new WREP projects.
2023 WREP projects include:
The Nature Conservancy - Arkansas/Mississippi Alluvial Valley (enrollment goal – 1,650 acres): This project will restore forested wetlands and improve wildlife habitat in the Arkansas/Mississippi Alluvial Valley with a focus on underserved landowners. A primary goal is to increase wetland habitat and connectivity, reduce siltation and nutrient runoff into adjacent waterways, and increase natural recharge to the Mississippi Alluvial Aquifer. A minimum of 668 acres will be specifically for the enrollment of underserved landowners.
Ducks Unlimited - Texas Playa Lakes (enrollment goal – 700 acres): This project will protect and restore playa wetlands and adjacent uplands buffers in the Texas Panhandle. Playas are the centers of biodiversity on the plains supporting 185 bird species, 450 plant species, 13 amphibian species, and 37 mammal species. In this dry landscape, playas are the main source of water for migrating waterfowl and shorebirds as well as resident prairie birds. Partners will target playas surrounding local towns and communities whose available drinking water is impacted due to heavy center pivot irrigation activities. This project is also focused on improving monarch and lesser prairie chicken habitat. Partners are working with nine separate organizations serving underserved landowners across Texas to increase their participation in the program.
Ducks Unlimited - Missouri Bootheel (enrollment goal – 240 acres): This project will acquire easements enabling project partners to protect, restore and enhance wetlands within the Mississippi River Basin Healthy Watershed Initiative (MRBI) landscape of southeast Missouri. A total of 240 acres owned by underserved landowners will be targeted for enrollment.
The Nature Conservancy - Tri-State Conservation Partnership (enrollment goal – 1,500 acres): This project focuses on enrolling underserved landowners and restoring forested wetlands within priority portions of the Mississippi Alluvial Valley (MAV) in Arkansas, Louisiana and Mississippi. A minimum of 750 acres, will be specifically targeted for enrollment of underserved landowners.
Mississippi River Trust - Lower Batture (enrollment goal – 2,000 acres): This project aims to achieve more sustainable land and water management in the river’s active floodplain, or Batture, and nearby flood-prone lands in Arkansas, Louisiana, and Mississippi, thus providing significant ecological, economic and societal benefits. A minimum of 250 acres will be specifically targeted for enrollment of underserved landowners.
About WREP
WREP is part of the Agricultural Conservation Easement Program (ACEP), a voluntary conservation program through which NRCS enters into agreements with eligible partners to leverage resources to carry out high priority wetland protection, restoration and enhancement projects to improve wildlife habitat. WREP enables conservation partners to use innovative restoration methods and practices and to leverage funding to benefit critical resource concerns in their project area.
Through WREP projects, eligible conservation partners work with local agriculture producers to protect, restore and enhance high-priority wetlands on agricultural lands. WREP enables effective integration of wetland restoration on working agricultural landscapes, providing meaningful benefits to farmers and ranchers who enroll in the program and to the communities where the wetlands exist.
Wetland easements are also excellent “carbon sinks” where carbon is stored in the soil thus reducing greenhouse gasses in the atmosphere, and they offer much needed buffers from flood waters while providing resiliency to productive agricultural lands along riverine systems.
Restored wetland ecosystems filter sediments and chemicals that help improve downstream water quality, enhances wildlife and aquatic habitat, reduces impacts from flooding, recharges groundwater and offers recreational benefits.
Conservation partners can find more information on the WREP website.
Landowners can find more information about wetland reserve easements opportunities, visit the ACEP website.
More Information
Under the Biden-Harris administration, USDA is engaged in a whole-of-government effort to combat the climate crisis and conserve and protect our nation’s lands, biodiversity and natural resources including our soil, air and water. Through conservation practices and partnerships, USDA aims to enhance economic growth and create new streams of income for farmers, ranchers, producers and private foresters. Successfully meeting these challenges will require USDA and our agencies to pursue a coordinated approach alongside USDA stakeholders, including State, local and Tribal governments.
USDA touches the lives of all Americans each day in so many positive ways. In the Biden-Harris administration, USDA is transforming America’s food system with a greater focus on more resilient local and regional food production, fairer markets for all producers, ensuring access to healthy and nutritious food in all communities, building new markets and streams of income for farmers and producers using climate smart food and forestry practices, making historic investments in infrastructure and clean energy capabilities in rural America, and committing to equity across the Department by removing systemic barriers and building a workforce more representative of America. To learn more, visit www.usda.gov.