Big Boggy Draft Land Protection Plan

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Big Boggy Draft Land Protection Plan

The Service has prepared this draft plan with the intent of establishing a limited acquisition boundary for Big Boggy National Wildlife Refuge. Within the proposed boundaries, the Service would work only with willing sellers to expand conservation through fee title and conservation easement conservation easement
A conservation easement is a voluntary legal agreement between a landowner and a government agency or qualified conservation organization that restricts the type and amount of development that may take place on a property in the future. Conservation easements aim to protect habitat for birds, fish and other wildlife by limiting residential, industrial or commercial development. Contracts may prohibit alteration of the natural topography, conversion of native grassland to cropland, drainage of wetland and establishment of game farms. Easement land remains in private ownership.

Learn more about conservation easement
acquisitions consistent with our Strategic Growth Policy. The goal is to deliver in-perpetuity conservation on up to 55,000 acres of land for Big Boggy NWR. Acquiring these lands or easements is intended to enhance wildlife populations through the protection of habitats for such species as whooping crane, black rail, mottled duck, Attwater’s prairie-chicken and other species of high conservation value.In addition, these protections will help prevent the future listing of endangered or threatened species and support the delisting of listed species.

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BigBoggy-Land-Protection-Plan_DRAFT.pdf2.07 MB2.07 MB
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Plan
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Reddish Egret
Big Boggy National Wildlife Refuge, located at the end of Chinquapin Road and just north of the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway protects saline and intermediate marsh habitat for wintering waterfowl, shorebirds, wading and waterbirds, as well as other species such as white-tailed deer, coyotes, bobwhite...
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Public Domain
Program
A bright blue sky obstructed by fluffy white clouds reflected off of a stream shot from inside a kayak
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service manages an unparalleled network of public lands and waters called the National Wildlife Refuge System. With more than 570 refuges spanning the country, this system protects iconic species and provides some of the best wildlife viewing opportunities on Earth.
Ecosystem
Subject tags
Landscape conservation
FWS and DOI Region(s)