800 acres of wildlife habitat, agricultural land gains protection in Franklin County - East Idaho News
Pocatello

800 acres of wildlife habitat, agricultural land gains protection in Franklin County

  Published at  | Updated at
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready ...

POCATELLO — The Sagebrush Steppe Land Trust has announced that over 800 acres of wildlife habitat and agricultural land in Franklin County have gained protection through conservation easements.

The lands now protected are two adjacent properties, according to a press release from the land trust. Both properties have been owned and managed by the same family for several generations and will remain in active agricultural use.

“Our motivation for doing a conservation easement is simple,” said one of the landowners, who asked to remain anonymous, in the release. “We love the land and the wildlife that lives there and want to preserve its quality for the future.”

The release states that the conserved lands provide habitat for mule deer, elk, moose, sharp-tailed grouse, Bonneville cutthroat trout and several other conservation-priority species. The properties connect thousands of acres of public lands in the area, preserving wildlife migration corridors and the landscape connectivity that supports long-term ecosystem resilience.

A moose on one of the newly-protected private properties. The conserved lands provide important habitat for other species as well, including mule deer, elk, sharp-tailed grouse and Bonneville cutthroat trout. | Courtesy of the landowners.
A moose on one of the newly-protected private properties. The conserved lands provide important habitat for other species as well, including mule deer, elk, sharp-tailed grouse and Bonneville cutthroat trout. | Courtesy of the landowners

The landscape also supports significant riparian corridors and a wide range of native plants, including big sagebrush, antelope bitterbrush, Rocky Mountain maple and native grasses.

Sagebrush Steppe says conservation easements are voluntary agreements created to limit development in order to protect agricultural lands, wildlife habitat or other open space resources.

The agreements are between a landowner and a land trust or government agency, in which the landowner retains many private property rights, according to the National Conservation Easement Database. They do not automatically make properties open to the public.

With these lands now protected, the land trust has reportedly protected more than 11,300 acres across southeast Idaho.

“These are red-letter days for us,” said Heath Mann, the Sagebrush Steepe’s executive director, in the release. “I am humbled by the landowners’ desire to preserve their legacy. Together, we are protecting the Idaho we love today for the Idaho we hope to see tomorrow.”

Funding for these projects was provided through partnerships with the Natural Resources Conservation Service, PacifiCorp through the Bear River Hydroelectric Project Environmental Coordination Committee and support from private donors.

Sagebrush Steppe Land Trust is a nonprofit organization with a mission “to protect, connect, and enhance wildlife habitat, working lands, and community spaces in Southeast Idaho, now and for future generations,” according to its website.

Views from newly-protected private properties in Franklin County. | Courtesy of the landowners.
Views from newly-protected private properties in Franklin County. | Courtesy of the landowners

SUBMIT A CORRECTION