The Service completed this plan
in 2011.
Landowners interested in easements may contact these offices.
NORTH DAKOTA
Bismarck
Wetlands Acquisition Office
3425 Miriam Avenue
Bismarck, North Dakota 58501
701 / 250 4415
Minot
Wetlands Acquisition Office
2001 6th Street Southeast, Suite 5
Minot, North Dakota 58701
701 / 852 0318
SOUTH DAKOTA
Huron
Wetlands Acquisition Office
200 4th Street Southwest, Room 307
Huron, South Dakota 57350
605 / 352 7014
Sand Lake
Wetlands Acquisition Office
39650 Sand Lake Drive
Columbia, South Dakota 57443
605 / 885 6357
BRANCH OF
LAND PROTECTION PLANNING
134 Union Boulevard, Suite 300
Lakewood, Colorado 80228
303 / 236 4366
North Dakota, South Dakota
The Service has established the Dakota Grassland Conservation Area and will work with private landowners to accelerate the conservation of native prairie — both wetland and grassland habitats — within the Prairie Pothole Region in the eastern parts of North Dakota and South Dakota.
The conservation area is an easement program that will be part of a landscape-scale, strategic habitat conservation effort. The focus is to conserve populations of migratory birds by protecting the unique, highly diverse, and endangered ecosystem known as the Prairie Pothole Region.
The overall purpose of the proposed Dakota Grassland Conservation Area is to preserve, at a landscape scale, the ecological integrity of the area’s mixed-grass prairie, tallgrass prairie, prairie pothole wetlands, and riparian woodlands with the support of the associated ranching culture. More specifically, the project is designed to do the following:

Conservation easement contracts will specify perpetual protection of habitat for trust species and limits on residential, industrial, or commercial development. Contracts will prohibit alteration of the natural topography, conversion of native grassland to cropland, drainage of wetland, and establishment of game farms.
Easement land will remain in private ownership. Therefore, property tax and invasive plant control will remain the responsibility of the landowner, who also would retain control of public access to the land. Contracts would not restrict grazing on easement land.
Land protection plan (LPP) 2011
LPP (26 MB PDF)
Includes the environmental assessment (EA)
in appendix C.
By section, for faster download:
Contents, Summary (2 MB PDF)
Chapter 1, Introduction and Project Description (7 MB PDF)
Chapter 2, Area Description and Resources (8 MB PDF)
Chapter 3, Threats to and Status of Resources (3 MB PDF)
Chapter 4, Project Implementation (4 MB PDF)
Appendixes (28 MB PDF)
Draft EA and draft LPP 2011
Draft EA and draft LPP (8 MB PDF)
Planning process documents
News release June 20, 2011
News release December 29, 2010
News release December 1, 2010