The Big Dry Arm Spring Storm in the Great Basin Red Cliffs Desert Tortoise Reserve March Morning on the Platte River After a Spring Storm in the Great Basin Hunting Upland Birds at Kingsbury Lake Waterfowl Production Area Sandhill Migration on the Platte River Badlands Sunrise The Green River at Ouray NWR North Park Lupines Moab Sunset
Migratory Birds - Joint Ventures
Mountain-Prairie Region
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Joint Ventures Overview

Joint Ventures have risen to the challenge of maintaining waterfowl as a significant focus and incorporating research, biological planning, monitoring and evaluation and on-the-ground projects that address bird conservation and helps to conserve critical bird habitats.

Region 6 Joint Venture Links: Prairie Pothole | Intermountain West | Rainwater Basin | Playa Lakes | Northern Great Plains

About Joint Ventures

What Do Joint Ventures Do?

  • Build partnerships for conservation where participation is voluntary and programs are non-regulatory
  • Work on public and private lands to protect, restore and enhance critical habitats for waterfowl, shorebirds, waterbirds and landbirds
  • Build a scientific foundation thorough improvement of data bases, scientific technologies and monitoring that help partners target conservation efforts to where they will do the most good and make the best use of resources
  • Leverage partner dollars with Federal and State funds to expand and enhance conservation activities


To learn more about migratory bird habitat joint ventures. »



Who We Are

Peregrine Falcon, juvenile

In 1986, an idea became reality. Canada, the United States and Mexico united to form the North American Waterfowl Management Plan (NAWMP), designed to restore diminishing continental waterfowl populations to the levels of the 1970’s.

The “Plan” as it is sometimes called, brought together Federal and State agencies, private conservation organizations, business and private landowners national corporations and individuals of the three countries into “Joint Ventures”. Joint Ventures are regionally based, self-directed partnerships that carry out science-based conservation through a wide array of community participation.

From 1986 through the mid-90’s, Joint Ventures focused almost exclusively on waterfowl, striving to meet the goals of the NAWMP. In the late 1990’s and early 2000, several other bird initiatives, based partially on the successes of the NAWMP, became reality. These included the Partners in Flight North American Landbird Plan, the US Shorebird Conservation Plan, and the North American Waterbird Conservation Plan.

Joint Ventures, arguably one of the most successful conservation strategies ever begun, rose to the challenge, maintaining waterfowl as a significant focus and incorporating research, biological planning, monitoring and evaluation and on-the-ground projects that would address a broad spectrum of bird conservation and conserve critical bird habitats.

Now that we are in the 21st century, the legacy continues as Joint Ventures provide a model for regional, national and international conservation through the spirit of partnership and cooperation.

 

Priority Species

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Important Information

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The mission of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is working with Others to conserve, protect, and enhance fish, wildlife, plants and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the American People.
Last modified: November 12, 2015
All Images Credit to and Courtesy of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Unless Specified Otherwise.
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