F24AS00160 - Tortoise and Freshwater Turtle Fund

The summary for the F24AS00160 - Tortoise and Freshwater Turtle Fund grant is detailed below. This summary states who is eligible for the grant, how much grant money will be awarded, current and past deadlines, Catalog of Federal Domestic Assistance (CFDA) numbers, and a sampling of similar government grants. Verify the accuracy of the data FederalGrants.com provides by visiting the webpage noted in the Link to Full Announcement section or by contacting the appropriate person listed as the Grant Announcement Contact. If any section is incomplete, please visit the website for the Fish and Wildlife Service, which is the U.S. government agency offering this grant.
F24AS00160 - Tortoise and Freshwater Turtle Fund: Background, Purpose and Program Requirements: The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's (Service) mission is to work with others to conserve, protect and enhance fish, wildlife, plants, and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the American people. The International Affairs Program delivers on this mission through its financial and technical assistance programs by supporting strategic projects that deliver measurable conservation results for priority species and their habitats around the world. Turtles represent one of the most imperiled animal groups on earth. Of the world's 342 species of tortoises and freshwater turtles, more than half face the threat of extinction. Habitat loss and the legal and illegal trade of turtles and turtle products (for food, pets, and traditional medicines, etc.) continue to drive sharp declines in turtle populations globally. Recognizing the ecological value and alarming declines of turtles worldwide, the U.S. Congress established a conservation fund for tortoises and freshwater turtles (through the John Dingell, Jr. Conservation, Management, and Recreation Act, 2019, Public Law 116-9*), signed into law on March 12, 2019. The Service's Tortoise and Freshwater Turtle Conservation Fund is soliciting proposals that conserve threatened tortoise and freshwater turtle species that occur in foreign countries and in territories of the United States. Proposed work must occur outside of the 50 U.S. states or must demonstrate substantive conservation benefits to populations outside of the 50 U.S. states. The primary purpose of this new conservation fund is to provide financial support for projects that conserve populations and habitats of freshwater turtles and tortoises and address threats to their survival. The United States, second only to Asia in diversity of turtle species, has acted in recent decades as a steward of chelonian conservation, and this fund allows the Service to expand efforts to protect imperiled turtle species around the world. Proposed work must occur outside of the 50 U.S. states or must demonstrate substantive conservation benefits to populations outside of the 50 U.S. states. The primary purpose of this new conservation fund is to provide financial support for projects that conserve populations and habitats of freshwater turtles and tortoises and address threats to their survival. The United States, second only to Asia in diversity of turtle species, has acted in recent decades as a steward of chelonian conservation, and this fund allows the Service to expand efforts to protect imperiled turtle species around the world. The goal of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's (Service) Tortoise and Freshwater Turtle (TFT) Conservation Program is to recover and maintain viable populations of tortoise and freshwater turtles in the wild by addressing the critical threats to their survival. We do this through financial and technical assistance to support evidence-based interventions and regular evaluations that inform our tortoise and freshwater turtle conservation strategy and carry out the purpose of the Marine Turtle Conservation Act (MTCA). Our strategy encompasses the following key objectives: Species Protection: Conserving TFTs in their habitats through focused, measurable actions that involve collaborating with essential stakeholders to reduce threats such as exploitation, harmful fishing practices and predation.Habitat Protection: Minimizing habitat loss, encroachment, and degradation by working closely with communities and land stewards to implement effective habitat protection and restoration techniques, with a special focus on nesting and foraging habitats in or around conservation areas. Combating Exploitation: Supporting community-led initiatives to reduce poaching through the development of alternative livelihoods, co-designed with local stakeholders, and behavior change campaigns grounded in social science concepts. Legal Protections and Law Enforcement: Collaborating with government and regional authorities to enhance legal protections for TFTs by building intelligence information exchanges and bolstering law enforcement capacity. Demand Reduction: Facilitating behavior change outreach programs, informed by social science concepts, to curtail the demand for TFTs. Competitive projects will work to support the Service's key objectives and bolster long-term conservation capacity for TFTs. We broadly define capacity to include: 1) the capacity of habitat to sustain TFT populations through threat reduction and habitat restoration activities and 2) the capacity of individuals and institutions at local and national levels to champion the conservation of TFTs in those countries and regions. We prioritize the following actions to bolster long-term TFT conservation capacity within the broader Service program goal:Cultivate enduring conservation capacity among local and indigenous communities, local and national non-governmental organizations, government bodies, and other pertinent stakeholders.Support the growth of local conservation initiatives that promotes opportunities to build skills and develop networks of local multidisciplinary practitioners relevant to TFT conservation. Facilitate information sharing between communities, turtle networks, government and regional authorities; and institutions on effective techniques to reduce the threats to TFTs in their habitats.  Identify and address gaps in TFT conservation through a comprehensive, interdisciplinary approach.Develop and implement community-led action plans with direct conservation impacts that promote sustained threat reduction and consistent monitoring (habitat or species) to identify and alert relevant entities for more urgent or expanded attention if increased threats are identified. Provide clear evidence of how the proposed activities will yield lasting, significant benefits for the species in focus. Proposals should demonstrate how project activities directly address one or more of the key objectives and actions and include a plan for monitoring and evaluation (i.e., measuring indicators). For this Notice of Funding Opportunity, while all projects that work to implement one or more of the overall Service program goals are eligible for funding, TFTs as listed in the table below or threat reduction activities focused in the geographic area of South Asia and Southeast Asia will be prioritized. Table 1: Taxonomic list by family of non-U.S. terrestrial tortoises and freshwater turtles with high extinction risk and most urgent conservation needs.FamilyTaxonCommon NameChelidaeChelodina mccordi mccordi and Chelodina mccordi timorensisRoti Island Snake-necked Turtle and Timor Snake-necked Turtle GeoemydidaeBatagur affinis, Batagur baska, Batagur borneoensis, Batagur dhongoka, Batagur kachuga and Batagur trivittataSouthern River Terrapin, Northern River Terrapin, Painted Terrapin, Three-striped Roofed Turtle, Red-crowned Roof Turtle and Myanmar Roofed Turtle Cuora amboinensis, Cuora bourreti, Cuora cyclornata, Cuora galbinifrons, Cuora mouhotii and Cuora picturataSoutheast Asian Box Turtle, Bourret's Box Turtle, Vietnamese Three-striped Box Turtle, Indochinese Box Turtle, Keeled Box Turtle and Southern Vietnam Box Turtle Cyclemys atripons, Cyclemys oldhamii, Cyclemys pulchristriataWestern Black-bridged Leaf Turtle, Southeast Asian Leaf Turtle and Eastern Black-bridged Leaf Turtle Geoclemys hamiltoniiSpotted Pond Turtle Geoemyda spengleriBlack-breasted Leaf Turtle Hardella thurjiiCrowned River Turtle Heosemys annandalii, Heosemys depressa, Heosemys grandis and Heosemys spinosaYellow-headed Temple Turtle, Arakan Forest Turtle, Giant Asian Pond Turtle and Spiny Turtle Leucocephalon yuwonoiSulawesi Forest Turtle Mauremys annamensis and Mauremys muticaVietnamese Pond Turtle and Yellow Pond Turtle Melanochelys tricarinataTricarinate Hill Turtle Morenia ocellata and Morenia petersiBurmese Eyed Turtle and Indian Eyed Turtle Orlitia borneensisMalaysian Giant Turtle Pangshura sylhetensisAssam Roofed Turtle Sacalia bealei and Sacalia quadriocellataBeale's Eyed Turtle and Four-eyed Turtle Siebenrockiella crassicollis and Siebenrockiella leytensisBlack Marsh Turtle and Palawan Forest Turtle Vijayachelys silvaticaCochin Forest Cane Turtle PlatysternidaePlatysternon megacephalumBig-headed Turtle TestudinidaeGeochelone platynotaBurmese Star Tortoise Indotestudo elongata, Indotestudo forstenii and Indotestudo travancoricaElongated Tortoise, Sulawesi Tortoise and Travancore Tortoise Manouria emys and Manouria impressaAsian Giant Tortoise and Impressed Tortoise TrionychidaeChitra chitra, Chitra indica and Chitra vandijkiSoutheast Asian Narrow-headed Softshell Turtle, South Asian Narrow-headed Softshell Turtle and Myanmar Narrow-headed Softshell Turtle Nilssonia formosa, Nilssonia gangetica, Nilssonia hurum, Nilssonia leithii and Nilssonia nigricansMyanmar Peacock Softshell Turtle, Indian Softshell Turtle, and Indian Peacock Softshell Turtle, Leith's Softshell Turtle and Black Softshell Turtle Palea steindachneri, Pelochelys cantorii and Rafetus swinhoeiWattle-necked Softshell Turtle, Asian Giant Softshell Turtle and Yangtze Giant Softshell Turtle
Federal Grant Title: F24AS00160 - Tortoise and Freshwater Turtle Fund
Federal Agency Name: Fish and Wildlife Service (DOI-FWS)
Grant Categories: Natural Resources
Type of Opportunity: Discretionary
Funding Opportunity Number: F24AS00160
Type of Funding: Cooperative Agreement
CFDA Numbers: 15.645
CFDA Descriptions: Information not provided
Current Application Deadline: February 19th, 2024
Original Application Deadline: February 19th, 2024
Posted Date: December 14th, 2023
Creation Date: December 14th, 2023
Archive Date: November 6th, 2025
Total Program Funding: $1,000,000
Maximum Federal Grant Award: $450,000
Minimum Federal Grant Award: $150,000
Expected Number of Awards:
Cost Sharing or Matching: No
Last Updated: December 14th, 2023
Applicants Eligible for this Grant
Others (see text field entitled "Additional Information on Eligibility" for clarification.)
Additional Information on Eligibility
Applicants may be individuals, multinational secretariats, foreign national and local government agencies, U.S. and foreign non-profits, non-governmental organizations, for-profit organizations, community and Indigenous organizations, U.S. and foreign public and private institutions of higher education, and U.S. territorial governments.   
Grant Announcement Contact
Ann Marie Lauritsen
[email protected]
[email protected]
Similar Government Grants
F24AS00158 - Marine Turtle Conservation Fund
Tortoise and Freshwater Turtle Fund
Marine Turtle Conservation Fund
Marine Turtle Conservation Fund 2011
More Grants from the Fish and Wildlife Service
Hydrilla Early Detection, Surveillance, and Response in the Connecticut River
F24AS00309 FY2024 Latin America Regional Program
F25AS00008 - NAWCA 2025 Canada Grants
F25AS00007 Multistate Conservation Grant Program Announcement
Invasive Species Eradication Funding Opportunity

FederalGrants.com is not endorsed by, or affiliated with, any government agency. Copyright ©2007-2024 FederalGrants.com