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NRCS Longleaf Pine Initiative Available to Private Landowners

NRCS Chief in Alexandria to Announce Initiative

Longleaf pine forests once covered millions of acres throughout the southeastern United States. Today, only a few thousand acres of this vital habitat remains. To help sustain, enhance and restore longleaf pine forests, USDA’s Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) Chief Dave White visited Louisiana on November 10, 2010, to announce the availability of over $13.9 million to help private landowners in nine states restore and manage longleaf pine.

“The longleaf pine is one of our key native species; providing a home to hundreds of plant and animal species as well as being a tremendous economic resource,” White said. “Restoring and expanding this species is only made possible through voluntary partnerships with conservation-minded landowners who share our goal of healthy forests.”

Longleaf pine habitat can contain as many as 300 different species of groundcover plants per acre, and approximately 60 percent of the amphibian and reptile species found in the southeast. Additionally, this forested habitat is home to at least 122 endangered or threatened plant and animal species including the fox squirrel, northern bobwhite, red-cockaded woodpecker and gopher tortoise.

“We’ve taken great steps toward conserving longleaf pine forests in Louisiana,” said Kevin Norton, NRCS State Conservationist in Louisiana. “Through this initiative, and the great works of our landowners, we will be able to enhance and protect more of this essential habitat.”

The Longleaf Pine Initiative will incorporate both technical and financial assistance providing $864,750 to help landowners in Louisiana improve habitat on agricultural land, nonindustrial private forest, and Tribal land.

Nine states are included in the Longleaf Pine Initiative are: Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Texas and Virginia.

Approved participants will receive financial assistance for implementing conservation practices including planting longleaf pine, installing firebreaks, conducting prescribed burning and controlling invasive plants.

Additional information on the Longleaf Pine Initiative, NRCS and our programs is available on our website at www.la.nrcs.usda.gov or at your local USDA NRCS office.

NRCS is a technical agency of the United States Department of Agriculture that works one-on-one with America’s farmers and ranchers, primarily on privately-owned lands, to help them in their efforts to improve and protect the natural resources. NRCS is celebrating 75 years of helping people help the land. Since 1935, the NRCS conservation delivery system has advanced a unique partnership with state and local governments and private landowners delivering conservation based on specific, local conservation needs, while accommodating state and national interests.

Last Modified: 11/15/2010

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