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AEP, The Conservation Fund and U.S. Department of the Interior acquire delta land
for reforestation and habitat restoration
American Electric Power, The
Conservation Fund and the U.S. Department of the Interior's Fish & Wildlife
Service have joined forces to acquire, protect and restore a bottomland hardwood
forest on 18,372 acres near Catahoula Lake in east central Louisiana, a major haven
for migratory birds in the Mississippi delta.
- The Conservation Fund acquired 18,372 acres from Tensas Delta Land Co. The Conservation
Fund, in turn, conveyed 10,257 acres to AEP for $3.2 million and 8,115 acres to
the USFWS for $1.5 million from the Migratory Bird Conservation Fund, which provides
federal funding for land acquisitions.
- AEP restored bottomland hardwood habitat by planting native trees on its property
and a portion of the property owned by the USFWS.
- The entire 18,372 acres is managed by the USFWS as part of Catahoula National Wildlife
Refuge (NWR), one of 21 refuges in Louisiana, for the benefit of migratory birds,
turkey, white-tailed deer and other wildlife.
View a map of the Catahoula Reforestation
Project area
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