Our Vision

Our Goals

Membership

The Missouri River Watershed Coalition includes federal, state, and local agencies, businesses, universities, conservation groups, and private landowners. Together, they have drafted a Saltcedar Management Plan to coordinate efforts to manage saltcedar and restore riparian corridors of the Missouri River watershed. Contact members below for more information.

The Six-State Project Area


The Missouri River Watershed

From its headwaters in the northern Rockies, the Missouri River flows through the Upper Midwest, then southeast to join the Mississippi River, fed by a watershed that covers 500,000 square miles over 10 states.

The rivers, streams, reservoirs, and ponds of the watershed support agriculture, recreation, tourism, wildlife habitat, irrigation, drinking water, power generation and livestock production. Many of these uses are threatened by invasive saltcedar (Tamarix spp.).

As saltcedar replaces native vegetation along the Missouri River and its tributaries, it can create dense monocultures that restrict access for irrigation, wildlife, and outdoor enthusiasts. Saltcedar can wipe out habitat used by threatened and endangered species and may reduce the amount and quality of water essential to agriculture, recreation and tourism, wildlife, power generation, and human consumption.

The Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Wyoming, Nebraska and Colorado departments of agriculture signed a Memorandum of Agreement in 2006 and an MOA Addendum in 2008 to coordinate the management of invasive plant species in the six-state area (download Six-state political and tributary map. Saltcedar was the first species targeted.

Meetings

Spring 2009 meeting TBA

Minutes of previous meetings

For more information . . .

Website hosted by Center for Invasive Plant Management.