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WYldlife for Tomorrow connects Wyoming tourism and ancillary businesses with important conservation projects designed to protect wildlife habitat in the state. Through innovative, tax-deductible giving initiatives, businesses directly contribute to the success of on-the-ground improvements to the natural infrastructure sustaining our billion-dollar wildlife recreation economy.

As a participant in Wyoming’s tourism economy, you rely on our state’s wild places for your livelihood. WYldlife for Tomorrow provides a simple funding mechanism so you know your business contributions go directly to work sustaining wildlife.

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ROW South Flat Creek Channel Restoration

Why?

  • Flat Creek is an important Yellowstone Cutthroat Trout spawning tributary that has been adversely affected by urbanization, rural land development, and water management.
  • The section of Flat Creek south of the town of Jackson is poor Yellowstone Cutthroat Trout habitat: it is overly straight, wide, and open, and contains movement barriers that limit access to good spawning habitat.
  • There is ample hydrology and watershed function from upstream sources to improve instream habitat and water quality throughout a degraded, channelized section of creek.
  • Improved stream function will reduce stream bank erosion, restore reference channel dimension and riparian vegetation, reduce localized winter icing problems, diversify instream habitat, and address stream warming.
  • These changes will result in improvements to Yellowstone cutthroat Trout habitat.

How?

  • A total of 1.2 miles of Flat Creek will be restored to reference conditions, with Phase II (current phase) focusing on 0.6 miles of the waterway.
  • The riparian area will be restored using a combination of grazing exclosure fencing and extensive planting of willow and cottonwoods.
  • The new channel will be narrower and deeper, and have connection to its floodplain through the installation of meander bends, toewood, and vegetated soil lifts.
  • Seasonal barriers to upstream fish movement will be retrofitted to allow for year-round passage.

Partners

 

Community Foundation Jackson Hole
Jackson Hole One Fly
Lockhart Cattle Co.
Natural Resource Conservation Service
Teton Conservation District
Trout Unlimited
U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service
Water for Wildlife Foundation
Western Native Trout Initiative
Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality
Wyoming Game & Fish Department
Wyoming Governor’s Big Game License Coalition
Wyoming Water Development Office
Wyoming Wildlife Natural Resource Trust Fund

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“funding for important conservation projects like highway crossings, habitat improvement, and education of our youth all have the potential to meaningfully contribute in a better future for Wyoming...”

Mark Gordon

Governor

Project Information

location

Wilson, Wyoming

Project Details

Restoration

Budget

$1,407,535

Start time

end time

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