OPEN CFDA 15.808 ↗ Competitive Cooperative Agreement Competitive ~100h typical effort

Cooperative Agreement for Affiliated Partner with the Great Lakes Northern Forest Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Unit (CESU)

🏛 Geological Survey (DOI-USGS1)

✓ Free, no account · Source: Grants.gov · Last verified Jul 15, 2026

⏰ Deadline
Aug 14, 2026 in 29 days
💰 Award amount
$1 – $399K
📊 Total program funding
$399K
🎯 Expected awards
1 recipient
📍 Scope
Regional

Can you apply?

This grant is for CESU (Cooperative Ecosystem Studies Units) affiliated partners. Only organizations already participating in the Great Lakes Northern Forest CESU Program can apply. Research must focus on bumble bee demography and ecology, particularly the rusty patched bumble bee. Eligible partners typically include universities, state agencies, and nonprofits with research capacity in entomology or wildlife biology.

The project supports long-term population monitoring, novel monitoring technologies, and data compilation efforts. Funding will support research that informs federal and state land-management decisions for endangered pollinator recovery.

Geographic focus is the Upper Midwest region, though specific state eligibility depends on CESU partnership status.

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Program description

The U.S. Geological Survey’s (USGS) Fort Collins Science Center is offering a cooperative-agreement funding opportunity to a CESU partner having capability to conduct research and studies related to the long-term demography of bumble bees, with a focus on imperiled species. The research will focus on Bombus affinis (rusty patched bumble bee), the previously-widespread bumble bee species whose populations have declined precipitously over the past two decades. This project will leverage collaborations to incorporate expertise in bumble bee ecology into a large existing project supporting the recovery of endangered and imperiled bumble bees. Current research interests include (1) the establishment and maintenance of site surveys to document long-term trends of rusty patched bumble bee, (2) studies that explore novel technologies for the monitoring of bumble bees, (3) studies that assess the types of sampling effort needed to achieve statistically viable assessments of bumble bee population trends, and (4) efforts to facilitate the compilation of data on bumble bee demography. The outcome of a successful agreement will be research products that help DOI and other land-management partners better understand and implement recovery strategies for imperiled bumble bees. Through this CESU agreement, the federal and state university partners will cooperate fully in development of a research program that will produce final products to be used in support of management decisions pertaining to bumble bees. 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. Bumble bees are important wildlife throughout the world and provide considerable economic benefit to cropping systems that require insect (and particularly buzz) pollination. Several previously-common bumble bee species in North America have declined markedly over the past two decades, prompting the listing of RPBB on the Endangered Species Act and petitions to list several other bumble bees as endangered. Many knowledge gaps have been identified that hamper the conservation of these species. A major knowledge gap is the long-term trends in these bumble bee species’ populations. Determination of long-term trends in bumble bees (or any wildlife populations) requires considerable commitment as well as the development of sustainable and cost-effective monitoring methods. Rapid methods have been recently developed to determine annual bumble bee occupancy rate of sites. This project will guide work to implement those protocols to establish long-term trends in bumble bee presence, help develop methods to determine bumble bee abundance, and explore new technologies for detecting the abundance and presence of bumble bees at local sites in the Upper Midwest. Pollinator conservation is among the top priorities for many land managers, and additional information is required to support management decisions and work toward the recovery of endangered pollinators. This project aligns strongly with EO 14192 – Unleashing Prosperity Through Deregulation and SO 3421 – Achieving Prosperity through Deregulation as research to demonstrate pollinator recovery is necessary to avoid unnecessary regulatory actions in accordance with EO 14192 and SO 3421. This project funds population monitoring of federally listed rusty patched bumble bee to track progress toward recovery and inform future delisting decisions. The population estimates that are being created via this project and agreement will be used as evidence by states and private stakeholders that will allow them to avoid regulation tied to the abundance of rusty patched bumble bee nests. Furthermore, this project includes working with the Army Corps of Engineers to create automated monitoring systems that will drastically reduce the costs from DOW facilities needed to monitor bumble bees.

Who can apply

Eligible applicants

How to apply

Application links

Key dates & requirements

Required documents

  • Cooperative Agreement proposal narrative
  • Project budget and budget narrative
  • Statement of commitment from CESU partner institution
  • Curriculum vitae or resumes of key personnel
  • Evidence of research capacity in entomology or related field

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.

120
awards (3 yrs)
$518M
total funded
66
unique recipients
$4.3M
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 5 awards $245.6M
  • CA 21 awards $72.1M
  • AK 13 awards $33.2M
  • FL 6 awards $22.8M
  • WA 4 awards $16.6M

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

Funding history

Annual funding for this program — Federal obligations (CFDA 15.808). How funding has trended year over year.

2021 $35,000,000
2022 $157,201,151
2023 $263,107,440
2024 $125,066,719
2025 est. $110,000,000
2026 est. $60,000,000

FAQ

Who is eligible to apply for this grant?

Only current partners of the Great Lakes Northern Forest CESU Program can apply. You must already be affiliated with the CESU partnership.

What research topics are supported?

The grant funds bumble bee demography studies, long-term population monitoring, novel detection technologies, and sampling methodology development. Focus is on the rusty patched bumble bee and other imperiled species.

Is cost-sharing required?

No. Cost-sharing is not required for this cooperative agreement.

What is the typical award amount?

Awards range from $1 to $399,000. Funding levels depend on project scope and research capacity demonstrated by the applicant.

When is the deadline?

The deadline is August 14, 2026. This is a fixed deadline; there are no rolling deadlines or multiple submission windows.

💡 Tips for applicants

  • Clearly demonstrate your organization's existing research capacity in bumble bee ecology or entomology before applying. Weak research credentials will hurt competitiveness.
  • Emphasize how your work will directly support federal and state land-management decisions for bumble bee recovery. Connect outcomes to actionable management products.
  • If possible, describe partnerships with USGS, Army Corps of Engineers, or state wildlife agencies. Collaboration strengthens applications.
  • Develop a realistic, sustainable monitoring plan. The grant priorities long-term trend documentation, so scalability matters more than initial novelty.
  • Budget for personnel and field equipment to conduct multi-year site surveys. Personnel costs and equipment purchases are typically allowable.

⚠️ Common mistakes

Applying without confirmed CESU partnership affiliation; weak or vague research capacity in entomology or wildlife biology. Proposing research that does not directly address bumble bee population trends or management decision-making. Underestimating the time and resources required for long-term population monitoring and failing to demonstrate sustainability of monitoring protocols.

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