The board budgeted $44,500 for conservation projects and $29,702 for hunting heritage-related efforts, including education and outreach events, chapter scholarships and 4-H Shooting Sports support. NWTF conservation project award funding will be matched by $1,421,466 in partner or grant funds for the approved projects.
“We are able to be involved in everything from youth camps to conservation easements because of our partners and our dedicated volunteers,” said Clayton Lenk, NWTF district biologist for Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota and Wisconsin. “The projects funded for 2026 will expand our public land habitat management work while also creating additional public access opportunities for everyone to enjoy.”
The NWTF’s Super Fund is a funding model through which volunteers raise money at banquets and other fundraisers and allocate a significant portion of those proceeds into impactful conservation, research and outreach projects at the state level and beyond.
Across South Dakota, approved projects will focus on public-land habitat restoration, prescribed fire capacity, conservation youth engagement and improvements to outdoor access infrastructure. Key efforts include Russian olive removal at the Horsehead Wildlife Management Area and cedar removal at the Pattee Creek Game Production Area in partnership with South Dakota Game, Fish and Parks; prescribed-burn equipment acquisition for the Southeast Dakota Prescribed Burn Association; ongoing work through the NWTF’s Waterways for Wildlife Initiative; and support for conservation outreach programs, including the South Dakota Wildlife Federation’s Conservation Youth Camp, Beacon Hill Shooting Range improvements and archery targets for the Humboldt Sharpshooters program, among others.
About the National Wild Turkey Federation
Since 1973, the National Wild Turkey Federation has invested over half a billion dollars into wildlife conservation and has positively impacted over 24 million acres of critical wildlife habitat. The NWTF has also invested over $10 million into wild turkey research to guide the management of the wild turkey population and to ensure sustainable populations into perpetuity. The organization continues to deliver its mission by working across boundaries on a landscape scale through its Four Shared Values: clean and abundant water, healthy forests and wildlife habitat, resilient communities, and robust recreational opportunities. With the help of its dedicated members, partners and staff, the NWTF continues its work to provide Healthy Habitats. and Healthy Harvests. for future generations.