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The full list of grant recipients, project descriptions and award amounts is available on the Michigan Invasive Species Grant Program website.
Since its start, the program has targeted four key objectives:
This year’s grant awards provide funding for several projects involving promising new methods of reducing the effects of terrestrial (land-based) invasive species:
Some of the grant dollars also will support a range of efforts to prevent and manage aquatic (water-based) invaders:
Descriptions and photos of the referenced terrestrial and aquatic invasive species (and many others) are available on the Michigan Invasive Species website under Species Profiles and Reporting Information.
In 2014 Gov. Rick Snyder and the state Legislature designated $5 million in annual funding to address invasive species. This support substantially enhanced Michigan’s Invasive Species Program for aquatic organisms, supported a formal program for terrestrial species, and initiated the Michigan Invasive Species Grant Program.
This cycle marks the fifth year of program funding. To date, $18.5 million has been awarded to support 109 projects undertaken by units of government, nonprofits and institutions. Because of Michigan’s Invasive Species Grant Program:
“It’s clear that Michigan’s Invasive Species Grant Program is accomplishing many of the goals set for the program at the very start,” said DNR Director Keith Creagh. “The fight to stop, contain and eradicate invasive species from Michigan’s woods and water is critical to the long-term protection of these valuable natural resources, and this grant program is helping in that fight.”
This year’s grants also will support 21 regional Cooperative Invasive Species Management Areas, the network of partnership organizations that work to manage and control invasive species. These CISMAs provide service to all 83 counties throughout the state. Proposed outcomes of CISMA projects receiving funding this year include:
In response to a May 2018 request for grant pre-proposals, 63 applications were received in June, seeking a total of approximately $9 million in funding. Thirty-seven applicants responded to the full proposal invitation, requesting $5.4 million in grants. Applicants were asked to commit to providing at least 10 percent of the total project cost in the form of a local match.
Learn more about invasive species – including control efforts, species identification and education and outreach opportunities – at michigan.gov/invasivespecies.
Michigan's Invasive Species Program is cooperatively implemented by the Michigan departments of Agriculture & Rural Development, Environmental Quality and Natural Resources.
Contact: Joanne Foreman, 517-284-5814