LANDOWNER SERVICES
Free conservation planning provided in partnership with
America’s Ecosystem Restoration Initiative
Click here to learn more!
Let’s work together to improve your operation and improve water quality.
Cattle tend to stay within 700 feet of a water source when they graze, so by providing more water sources you can expand your grazing capabilities. Creating water sources like this tire tank can also be paired with fencing around streams to keep livestock excluded and allow the riparian buffer to remain vegetated.
Prescribed burns can provide many ecological benefits like invasive plant management, improving forest management, improving soil fertility, and pest control by reducing habitats for ticks that carry diseases.
Landowner Service Benefits:
Free on-site visits and tailored conservation plans to your operation and land management goals.
Guidance in collaborating with the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS)
Assistance with funding programs and grants.
Participating in producer networking events such as pasture walks, field tours, and educational lunches.
In November of 2023, we launched a new phase of the Landowner Services Program funded by the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS). Our goal is to reach at least 100 landowners that are interested in implementing water quality improvement practices on their land, farm, or homestead. If you are interested in any of the practices listed or wish to stay up to date on events such as Pasture Walks, Field Tours, and Lunch and Learns complete the form below.
IRWP can provide $500 to landowners that want to implement BMPs!
Below are some of the practices that can be implemented on your operation through this program.
· Forest Management Plans
· Timber stand improvement
· Firebreaks
· Prescribed burning
· Wildlife habitat planting
· Tree and shrub establishment
· Riparian Forest Buffer
· Streambank Stabilization
· Herbaceous Weed Control
· Waste Storage Facility
· Animal Mortality Facility
· Prescribed Grazing
· Annual Forages for Grazing Systems
· Pasture and Hay Planting
· Fence
· Livestock pipeline
· Watering Facility
· Heavy Use Areas
Billboard Messages, Decoded
First Quarter: Watersheds and floodplain connectivity
Second Quarter: Lawn management with native plants
Third Quarter: Recreation and connections to the Illinois River
Fourth Quarter: Vegetation and generational farm planning
Thanks to a partnership with USDA-NRCS, IRWP has launched a series of billboard messages designed to engage new audiences in conservation efforts and water quality improvement. The campaign rotates themes quarterly, focusing on different aspects of conservation:
“NRCS is proud to partner with IRWP on this campaign. The visuals are intended to encourage broader public awareness of conservation and reinforce that small changes can have big impacts. Together, we can ensure that Arkansas’ resources remain abundant for generations to come.”
- Amanda Mathis, Arkansas State Conservationist for NRCS.
America’s Ecosystem Restoration Initiative
America’s Ecosystem Restoration Initiative (AERI) is a grant program through the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation that funds conservation planning focused on ecological restoration, public access for recreation, and partner driven conservation to improve water quality. This grant was awarded to the Cherokee Nation in 2025 and will fund conservation planning in the Illinois River Watershed in Arkansas and Oklahoma through 2027.
IRWP’s staff is able to conduct free site visits with private landowners or public land managers to provide conservation plans that can improve the ecological health of the Illinois River Watershed. The conservation plans will lay the foundation for potential future funding of implementing conservation practices.
If you are a landowner in the Illinois River Watershed with streamside property (does not have to be the Illinois River itself) schedule your site visit by contacting the IRWP staff member for your state.
AERI Project Partners
Want to learn about the benefits of prescribed burns?
The Arkansas Game and Fish Commission Prescribed Burn Workshop brought together interested landowners, students, and conservation partners to learn about the history of burning on our landscapes and safe, effective techniques for controlled burns from AGFC’s Private Lands Biologists.