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Search Through Grants for Land Conservation in Wisconsin
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Community Possible Grant Program: Play, Work, & Home Grants
US Bancorp Foundation
PNC Foundation: Foundation Grant
PNC Foundation
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Semnani Family Foundation Grants
Semnani Family Foundation
The Bank of America Foundation Sponsorship Program
Bank Of America Charitable Foundation Inc
Wells Fargo Community Giving
Wells Fargo Foundation
John C. Bock Foundation Grants
John C Bock Foundation
Chicago Region Land Conservation Grants
Gaylord & Dorothy Donnelley Foundation
Chicago Region Land Conservation Grants
Gaylord & Dorothy Donnelley Foundation
Our Vision for Land Conservation
Protected, restored, and sustainably managed lands and natural resources are essential for both nature and humans to thrive.
Land conservation protects biodiversity, addresses climate change, and supports diverse communities and economies. From natural areas to working lands, our approach to land conservation emphasizes climate resilience, inclusivity, and effective advocacy. We offer a wide array of support, including multiyear general operating grants, project grants, and technical assistance.
Chicago Region Land Conservation Grants
We offer general operating and project grants to organizations that further natural and working land protection and stewardship in the greater Chicago region, with emphasis on integrating climate resiliency, advocacy, and inclusive conservation strategies.
Grant Award Ranges
The amount and duration of grant awards are influenced by the organization’s/project’s level of impact on strategic land conservation efforts in the region, organizational/project size and budget, and the organization’s demonstrated leadership in advancing the core objectives of the Foundation’s land conservation strategy.
How We Work
Relationships are at the core of our grantmaking process. Each grant starts with a conversation with a program officer so we can get to know you and your work. We strongly encourage you to contact us in advance of our proposal deadlines so that we can explore potential fit.
Primary Goals of the Foundation’s Chicago Region Land Conservation Strategy
- Strategic Natural and Working Land Conservation: We aim to support organizations and projects advancing natural and working land protection and stewardship in strategically significant areas across the Chicagoland region that provide both ecological and quality-of-life benefits. Examples include wetland restoration in flood-prone communities, habitat connectivity improvements, and conservation easements on priority natural areas and agricultural land.
- Conservation that Integrates Climate Resilience: We support an increased emphasis on incorporating climate resilience considerations in all land conservation programs and projects. Examples include using resiliency prioritization in land acquisition and stewardship planning, protecting and restoring strategic parcels to increase habitat corridors, and working in vulnerable communities to mitigate climate and flooding impacts using land conservation and natural-focused green infrastructure strategies that deliver meaningful biodiversity and community benefits.
- Advocacy and Engagement Efforts: We believe that effective advocacy, public engagement, and communications strategies are critical to creating and enhancing land conservation programs and policies. Examples include efforts to develop new public conservation funding programs at the state and local level, in addition to engagement on proposed land use activities or conservation policies that could impact land protection efforts at scale in the region.
- Inclusive Conservation that Benefits All People: We want to increase the relevance and reach of land conservation work by supporting inclusive efforts that provide both biodiversity and human quality of life benefits for the diverse communities across the region. Examples include direct support of or meaningful engagement with community-based organizations to ensure that land conservation and resiliency efforts serve the needs of historically disinvested communities.
Wisconsin Wetland Conservation Trust- Restore Grants
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
Knowles-Nelson Stewardship Nonprofit Conservation Organization Grant
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
C.D. Besadny Conservation Fund Grants
Natural Resources Foundation Of Wisconsin Inc
Hunter R3 (Recruitment, Retention and Reactivation) Grant Program
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
Southwest Badger Natural Resource Conservation Grant
The Community Foundation of Southern Wisconsin
CTF: Rooted in Justice Grants
Cedar Tree Foundation
TJX Foundation Grants
The Tjx Foundation Inc
Max and Victoria Dreyfus Foundation Grant
Max and Victoria Dreyfus Foundation
Knowles-Nelson Stewardship State Property Development (Friends) Grant Program
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
State Property Friends Groups Grant Program
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
WDNR: Grants to Friends Groups
Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources
Biodiversity Fund- Large & Multi-Year Grants
Boreal Waters Community Foundation
Mission
The Biodiversity Fund supports efforts to maintain and strengthen biodiversity in the Duluth-Superior region through preservation and restoration of habitat, help for particular species and ecosystems, planning for changing conditions, research and education. The purpose is to consider now the value to future generations of the species and ecosystem diversity that will remain when/if human population stabilizes.
Biodiversity Fund
The Biodiversity Fund supports projects that preserve and restore habitats, assist vulnerable species and ecosystems, plan for environmental change, and promote research and education in the Duluth-Superior region.
The fund aims to protect the region's biodiversity through conservation, preservation, and restoration of natural resources for the benefit of future generations.
Biodiversity Fund- Large & Multi-Year Grants
The Fund may also support larger initiatives of up to $50,000 per year for up to three years, for projects that require sustained investment to achieve meaningful, long-term impact.
Multi-year requests should demonstrate:
- A clear long-term vision with defined milestones that allow progress to be assessed prior to subsequent years of funding each year
- How the work will scale, adapt, or deepen impact over time
- Strong partnerships, stewardship plans, or systems-level outcomes
- A plan for sustainability beyond the grant period
What We Mean by Biodiversity
Biodiversity is the variety of life on Earth, encompassing the diversity of genes, species, and ecosystems and the complex relationships that sustain them. Biodiversity underpins ecosystem stability, climate resilience, and human well-being by providing essential services such as clean air and water, natural food systems, nature-derived medicines, and climate adaptation and regulation.
This grant recognizes that healthy natural ecosystems and sustainable native plant and animal communities are deeply interconnected — environmental degradation often exacerbates social inequities and instability of communities of habitats and ecosystems. Community-led solutions strengthen ecological outcomes.
Biodiversity Fund Priorities
Funded projects should demonstrate strength in several of the following areas. Not every project must address all principles, but competitive proposals will show clear alignment across multiple dimensions.
- Upstream & Preventative Focus
- Projects address root causes rather than symptoms.
- Prioritize prevention, restoration, and long-term solutions
- Reduce risk and vulnerability for people, species, and ecosystems
- Anticipate environmental and social change rather than reacting after harm occurs
- Collaboration & Community Voice
- Projects are grounded in authentic partnership.
- Build cross-sector collaboration (e.g., nonprofits, Tribal Nations, schools, governments, researchers, community groups)
- Center the expertise and leadership of people with lived experience, including Indigenous knowledge and local ecological expertise
- Share power in design, decision-making, and implementation
- Equity-Centered Impact
- Projects advance equity for both people and place.
- Prioritize historically marginalized communities and/or vulnerable species and ecosystems
- Focus resources, decision-making power, or stewardship closer to impacted communities
- Recognize how environmental harm and social inequity intersect
- Systems, Policy & Practice Change
- Projects have transferability and relevance beyond a single site or program.
- Improve institutional practices, policies, land-use decisions, or resource flows
- Strengthen community-level systems related to housing, food security, climate adaptation, education, or conservation
- Demonstrate potential for replication, scaling, or broader adoption
- Sustainability & Capacity Building
- Projects plan for impact that lasts beyond the grant period.
- Strengthen organizational, community, or ecosystem capacity
- Build skills, infrastructure, stewardship, or long-term management plans
- Promote ongoing care, monitoring, or adaptive management of natural systems
- Evidence of Change & Learning
- Projects contribute to shared learning and understanding.
- Use data, research, community knowledge, or storytelling to demonstrate impact
- Measure ecological, social, or systems-level outcomes
- Share lessons learned to inform future equity-, resilience-, and biodiversity-focused work
Biodiversity Fund- Small Grants
Boreal Waters Community Foundation
Regional Conservation Partnership Program - Wisconsin
USDA: Natural Resources Conservation Service of Wisconsin
Regional Conservation Partnership Program - Wisconsin
Benefits
RCPP encourages partners to join in efforts with producers to increase the restoration and sustainable use of soil, water, wildlife and related natural resources on regional or watershed scales. Through RCPP, NRCS and its partners help producers install and maintain conservation activities in selected project areas. Partners leverage RCPP funding in project areas and report on the benefits achieved. The Secretary of Agriculture may also designate up to eight critical conservation areas to focus RCPP assistance.
Funding
Funding for RCPP is allocated evenly to projects in two different categories, state/multi-state and critical conservation areas. Conservation program contracts and easement agreements are implemented through the Agricultural Conservation Easement Program (ACEP), Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP), Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP) or the Healthy Forests Reserve Program (HFRP). NRCS may also utilize the authorities under the Watershed and Flood Prevention Program, other than the Watershed Rehabilitation Program, in the designated critical conservation areas.
The Regional Conservation Partnership Program brings together a wide array of local and national partners, including Indian tribes, nonprofit organizations, state and local governments, private industry, conservation districts, water districts, universities and many others. So far, more than 2,000 partners are engaged in locally-led conservation efforts through RCPP.
The most successful RCPP projects share four common characteristics: they innovate, leverage additional contributions, offer impactful solutions and engage more participants.
O'Reilly Automotive Foundation Grant
O'Reilly Automotive Foundation Inc
Community Ties Giving Program: Annual Local Grants
Union Pacific Foundation
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Sign up to see the full listGrants for Land Conservation in Wisconsin Highlights
Top Searched Grants for Land Conservation in Wisconsin
Grant Insights : Grant Funding Trends in Wisconsin
Average Grant Size
What's the typical amount funded for Wisconsin?
Grants are most commonly $86,127.
Total Number of Grants
What's the total number of grants in Grants for Land Conservation in Wisconsin year over year?
In 2024, funders in Wisconsin awarded a total of 23,742 grants.
2022 45,256
2023 45,044
2024 23,742
Top Grant Focus Areas
Among all the Grants for Land Conservation in Wisconsin given out in Wisconsin, the most popular focus areas that receive funding are Education, Philanthropy, Voluntarism & Grantmaking Foundations, and Human Services.
1. Education
2. Philanthropy, Voluntarism & Grantmaking Foundations
3. Human Services
Funding Over Time
How is funding for Grants for Land Conservation in Wisconsin changing over time?
Funding has increased by -51.03%.
2022 $3,758,149,480
2023
$4,172,752,976
11.03%
2024
$2,043,540,643
-51.03%
Wisconsin Counties That Receive the Most Funding
How does grant funding vary by county?
Milwaukee County, Dane County, and Brown County receive the most funding.
| County | Total Grant Funding in 2024 |
|---|---|
| Milwaukee County | $682,570,856 |
| Dane County | $466,029,602 |
| Brown County | $106,804,944 |
| Waukesha County | $72,062,878 |
| La Crosse County | $56,045,918 |