Habitat Conservation
Assistance Network
Proactive Conservation for Working Lands

Ranch Systems and Viability Planning Network

World Wildlife Fund’s (WWF) Sustainable Ranching Initiative is partnering with ranchers across the Northern Great Plains to increase sustainable grassland management on one million acres in five years.

The Ranch Systems and Viability Planning (RSVP) network supports ranchers through: technical assistance; scholarships for continuing education; ongoing soil, vegetation and bird monitoring; an innovative cost-share program; and other tools to make ranches ecologically and financially healthy for future generations. The program aims to prevent the conversion of rangeland into cropland, improve water infiltration and overall soil health, increase biodiversity on the landscape and support rural communities and family ranches.

The SRI program recognizes that each producer is unique and has different goals for their land, families, and communities. We are excited to offer the RSVP program as a unique and flexible program that will help ranchers meet those goals while increasing the health of rangelands and the ranch’s bottom line.

There are two main ways that ranchers can participate in the program. The first way is to enroll your ranch in RSVP and gain access to all program benefits including our cost-share program. The second way is to participate in RSVP network activities including ranch tours, online webinars and workshops and other educational offerings.


Contact Ranch Systems and Viability Planning Network

    Listed as:
  • Habitat Management Programs
Contact Ranch Systems and Viability Planning Network
Alexis Bonogofsky
Sustainable Ranching Initiative Program Director, World Wildlife Fund
1250 24th Street, N.W.
Washington, DC  20037
Phone: (406) 582-0236, ext 108


Service Area
Statewide Program in:
  • Montana
  • Nebraska
  • North Dakota
  • South Dakota
  • Wyoming

REMINDER: This listing is a free service of HabitatCAN.
Ranch Systems and Viability Planning Network is not employed by or affiliated with the Habitat Conservation Assistance Network, and the Network does not certify or guarantee their services. The reader must perform their own due diligence and use their own judgment in the selection of any professional.

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