Threatened and Endangered Species

CFDA 15.246 Active Cooperative Agreements (Discretionary Grants)
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Program Funding

Annual program obligations reported to SAM.gov.

Latest annual funding (estimated)
$1M FY2026
$3.2M
FY17
$736K
FY18
$156K
FY19
$3.8M
FY20
$3.8M
FY21
$2.2M
FY22
$6M
FY23
$6.1M
FY24
$1.8M
FY25*
$1M
FY26*
* estimated

Funded Projects

Examples of what this program has supported.

FY2024 STATUS AND HABITAT ENHANCEMENT FOR CACTUS FERRUGINOUS PYGMY-OWLS IN THE ALTAR AND AVRA VALLEY, ARIZONA, REMOTE SENSING OF FOREST SYSTEMS FOR INFORMING THREATENED SPECIES MANAGEMENT ANDCONSERVATION BLM GUNNISON FIELD OFFICE, and LEVERAGE NEARLY 20 YEARS OF SURVEY DATA ON MULFORDS MILKVETCH (ASTRAGALUS MULFORDIAE), A BUREAU-SENSITIVE SPECIES, TO DEVELOP A SPECIES DISTRIBUTION MODEL (SDM).
FY2025 COSUMNES FOCAL RAPTOR RIPARIAN HABITAT IMPROVEMENT PROJECT TO SUPPORT THE CONSERVATION AND RECOVERY OF BLM SENSITIVE RAPTOR SPECIES IN THE COSUMNES WATERSHED RESTORATION LANDSCAPE, DOCUMENT THE SEASONALITY OF MONARCH PRESENCE AND ACTIVITY WITHIN THE COSUMNES RIVER WATERSHED, WHILE REFINING A SCALABLE PROTOCOL FOR EVALUATING MONARCH ACTIVITY ACROSS SIMILAR LANDSCAPES, and PROVIDE CRITICAL INFORMATION THAT IS NEEDED TO DEVELOP AND IMPLEMENT STRATEGIES TO PROTECT IONE MANZANITA ARCTOSTAPHYLOS MYRTIFOLIA STANDS FROM MORTALITY CAUSED BY THE INTRODUCED ROOT PATHOGEN PHYTOPHTHORA CINNAMOMI.
FY2026 Unknown at this time.

Program Objective

The BLM, as a federal agency, is required under the Endangered Species Act of 1973 to carry out programs to protect and recover threatened and endangered (T&E) species and the ecosystems upon which they depend and implements tasks identified in T&E recovery plans developed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) and National Marine Fisheries Service. The BLM also implements conservation actions for sensitive and candidate species to preclude the need for federal listing. The Threatened and Endangered Species Program works to conserve and recover federally-listed animal and plant species and their habitat on public lands and shares cooperative responsibility with other BLM programs and partners for conservation of candidate and sensitive species. The scope of the T&E Species Program spans all taxa that merit designation under the Endangered Species Act or are identified as BLM sensitive species, providing a cross section of the most imperiled species of mammals, reptiles, birds, amphibians, invertebrates, fish, and plants. As of 2023, there are over 330 federally threatened and endangered species and 2400 federal sensitive species occur within BLM managed lands. Public lands often provide the key habitat for species recovery and conservation. Managing more land than any other federal agency, the BLM plays a pivotal and substantive role in species recovery. Due to the commingling of federal and nonfederal lands, the BLM’s proactive commitment to conserve threatened and endangered species is essential to federal, state, and non-governmental organizations in meeting our mutual interest of species recovery. Collaboration on conservation endeavors with the ultimate goal to increase threatened and endangered species or BLM sensitive species populations and manage and restore habitat of these federal trust wildlife, fish and plants within the public domain, serves a public purpose as required in cooperative agreements.

Eligibility

Eligible Applicants

  • State governments
  • Local governments
  • Public nonprofits
  • Federally recognized tribes
  • Private nonprofits
  • Native American organizations

How to Apply

Application Procedure

2 CFR, Part 200, Subpart C—Pre-Federal Award Requirements and Contents of Federal Awards. A Standard Form 424, Application for Federal Assistance, Standard Form 424A, Budget Information for Non-Construction Programs, Standard Form 424B, Assurances for Non-Construction Programs, and a written proposal, budget spreadsheet, a budget narrative/breakdown, and any other requirements specified in the Notice of Funding Opportunity Notice and must be submitted through www.grants.gov.
State plan is not required for this application.

Award Procedure

All applications will be initially screened for eligibility and compliance with the requirements stated in the program funding announcement. Applications passing this screening process will be forwarded for review by the proposal evaluation criteria, and any additional review factors, as stated in the funding announcement. State and District Office level and funding recommendations are made through the State's annual work plan. Final budget approvals rest with the State Director.

Award time varies depending on the type and complexity of the project, but should not be more than five years. Further information will be available for each program at the time the Notice of Funding Opportunity is posted on www.grants.gov and may be obtained by contacting the point of contact listed in the funding opportunity announcement. Most awards are anticipated within 90 days or less after the announcement closes.

Program details & compliance

Description

The BLM Threatened and Endangered Species Program works to conserve and recover federally-listed and Bureau sensitive animal and plant species and their habitat on public lands. The program also shares cooperative responsibility with other BLM programs and partners for conservation of more than 2,400 non-listed rare species with a goal of avoiding the need to list them in the future.

Use of Funds

Allowed Uses

Projects are primarily conducted on lands administered by the BLM but may also be conducted on other public or private lands. Most of these lands are located in the Western United States and Alaska. Assistance can be used to help protect, restore, assess and document federally-listed and rare species and the habitat upon which they depend; and to provide related public contact/education opportunities. Funding is highly variable each fiscal year.

Reporting & Compliance

Applicable 2 CFR 200 Subparts

  • Subpart B — General Provisions
  • Subpart C — Pre-Federal Award Requirements
  • Subpart D — Post-Federal Award Requirements
  • Subpart E — Cost Principles
  • Subpart F — Audit Requirements

Contacts

Division of Wildlife, Aquatics, and Environmental Protection
3852147422
760 Horizon Drive, Suite 324, Grand Junction, CO 81506
Data from SAM.gov Federal Assistance Listings. Source published: 2025-08-07. Spec v1.0. Last synced: 2026-05-30 02:32:53.