OPEN CFDA 15.808 ↗ Competitive Cooperative Agreement Moderate ~100h to apply

Cooperative Agreement for affiliated Partner with the Rocky Mountain Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Unit

🏛 Geological Survey (DOI-USGS1)

⏰ Deadline
Jul 5, 2026 in 29 days
💰 Award amount
$1 – $490K
📊 Total program funding
$490K
🎯 Expected awards
1 recipient
📍 Scope
National

Can you apply?

This grant is for CESU partner institutions conducting invasive species research through USGS's Fort Collins Science Center.

Only organizations that are active, participating partners of the Rocky Mountain Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Unit are eligible to apply. Partners typically include universities and research institutions within the CESU network.

The research must improve the INHABIT webtool, develop invasive species watch lists, and integrate findings into products for land management decision-making. Successful projects combine expertise in invasion ecology, statistical programming, remote sensing, and web application development.

Eligible applicants
Check your eligibility — what type of organization are you?

This grant is for CESU partner institutions conducting invasive species research through USGS's Fort Collins Science Center.

Only organizations that are active, participating partners of the Rocky Mountain Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Unit are eligible to apply. Partners typically include universities and research institutions within the CESU network.

The research must improve the INHABIT webtool, develop invasive species watch lists, and integrate findings into products for land management decision-making. Successful projects combine expertise in invasion ecology, statistical programming, remote sensing, and web application development.

Program description

The USGS is offering a funding opportunity to a CESU partner for research in improving the invasive species habitat tool (INHABIT) to deliver manager requested products to inform invasive species management. The research will be used to further develop the delivery to practitioners, ensuring they have the best available science to inform decision making [EO 14303 – Restoring Gold Standard Science (May 23, 2025)].Habitat suitability models can inform management actions including search and development of watch lists. Search activities are required to identify locations of invasive species before treatment actions can be taken. Other products such as phenology models of species can help determine timing of actions at these locations. Watch lists can inform early detection activities at local, regional, and national scales. Actions taken before a species has become well-established, facilitated by early detection, can mitigate impacts from invasive species at a lower cost and lead to potential eradication compared to longer established invasive species. INHABIT provides information to inform development of these lists for management areas across the United States. We can continue to improve both the development of these lists and the delivery of the information. INHABIT conducts virtual roundtables with end users from federal, state, and other organizations dealing with invasive species to obtain input on products. Implementing requested additions and changes produces a webtool used by practitioners from these agencies and organizations to inform management actions against invasive species including fire promoting invasives [EO 14308 – Empowering Commonsense Wildfire Prevention and Response (June 12, 2025)], those that may be invading across the border [EO 14165 – Securing our Borders (January 20, 2025)], and protecting America”s land and water resources.The U.S. Geological Survey”s (USGS) Fort Collins Science Center is offering a cooperative-agreement opportunity to a CESU partner that has the capability to conduct research and implement changes to INHABIT to meet the needs of these practitioners. The recipient should leverage collaborations to incorporate expertise in invasion ecology, statistical programming, remote sensing, and web application development into a large existing project on the geographic distribution of plants in the United States.Current USGS research interests include (but are not limited to) (1) the integration of new features into the INHABIT webtool, (2) refining the development of invasive species watch lists, (3) investigate ways of describing uncertainty in modeled products within INHABIT, and (4) develop plan for the next version of INHABIT. The outcome of a successful agreement will be research products integrated into INHABIT that help DOI and other land-management partners make decisions related to the management of invasive species. Through this CESU agreement, the federal and state university partners will cooperate fully in development of a research program that will produce final products within INHABIT to be used in support of land management decisions. The cooperation of the USGS and its CESU partner brings a combination of expertise to address this objective that is greater than that possessed by either partner on its own.

Who can apply

Eligible applicants

Details

This grant is for CESU partner institutions conducting invasive species research through USGS's Fort Collins Science Center.

Only organizations that are active, participating partners of the Rocky Mountain Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Unit are eligible to apply. Partners typically include universities and research institutions within the CESU network.

The research must improve the INHABIT webtool, develop invasive species watch lists, and integrate findings into products for land management decision-making. Successful projects combine expertise in invasion ecology, statistical programming, remote sensing, and web application development.

How to apply

Application links

Required documents

  • SF-424 (Application for Federal Assistance)
  • Project Narrative/Proposal
  • Budget and Budget Narrative
  • Organizational Capacity documentation
  • CESU partner verification

Program contact

Funding track record

Recent awards under CFDA 15.808 from the last 3 years — real organizations that won funding through this same program.

100
awards (3 yrs)
$506M
total funded
58
unique recipients
$5.1M
average award

Top 10 Largest Recent Awards

  1. $240,000,000
  2. $11,148,115
  3. $10,533,234
  4. $10,055,533
  5. $8,476,627
  6. $8,454,102
  7. $7,659,261
  8. $6,894,612
  9. $6,800,079
  10. $6,644,228

Top States by Funding

  • CO 4 awards $245.0M
  • CA 18 awards $70.3M
  • AK 12 awards $32.6M
  • FL 6 awards $22.8M
  • WA 3 awards $16.1M

Source: USAspending.gov — federal spending transparency. Data covers last 3 years.

FAQ

Who can apply for this grant?

Only active partner organizations in the Rocky Mountain CESU. Check the CESU website to confirm your organization's CESU membership status before applying.

When is the deadline?

The deadline is July 5, 2026. This is a fixed deadline, not rolling.

What kind of research does this fund?

Projects that enhance the INHABIT invasive species habitat tool, develop species watch lists, model phenology, and integrate uncertainty estimates. Work must support practitioner decision-making.

How much funding is available?

Awards range from $1 to $490,000, depending on project scope. The total funding pool is $490,000.

Do I need to provide matching funds?

No cost sharing is required for this grant.

💡 Tips for applicants

  • Clearly demonstrate your organization's CESU partner status early in the application. Ineligible organizations waste reviewer time.
  • Emphasize collaboration across disciplines (ecology, programming, remote sensing, web development). The stronger your team composition, the more competitive your application.
  • Connect your work directly to specific practitioner needs. Include examples of how your products will support actual land management decisions.
  • Highlight how your project builds on the existing INHABIT platform rather than creating redundant tools.
  • Address at least one of the four USGS research interests (feature integration, watch list refinement, uncertainty analysis, or next-version planning) explicitly in your proposal.

⚠️ Common mistakes

Applying without confirmed CESU partnership status. Submitting proposals that lack clear connections between research activities and practitioner products. Underestimating the importance of demonstrating multi-disciplinary team composition.

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