The National Geographic Society, in collaboration with the University of California Berkeley, has launched a rigorous search effort to identify individuals in the United States and territories implementing conservation research or applied conservation projects focused on ecological, cultural, or economic keystone species and their habitats.
Donor Name: National Geographic Society
State: All States
County: All Counties
Territory: American Samoa, Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, Commonwealth of Northern Mariana Islands, Guam and U.S. Virgin Islands
Type of Grant: Grant
Deadline: 05/23/2025
Size of the Grant: $10,000 to $100,000
Grant Duration: 2 Years
Details:
This RFP aims to:
- Identify researchers, conservation practitioners, Tribal leaders, and other community members leading conservation efforts focused on keystone species in the United States and territories.
- Support these individuals through direct and indirect funding, including learning opportunities focused on leadership and fostering collaboration, as well as available innovative equipment, technology, and data services to support and propel their projects.
- Elevate these individuals through regular exposure, speaking, and potential communication opportunities based on their project discoveries, accomplishments, and conservation impact.
- Illuminate landscapes in the United States and territories containing keystone species that reflect key themes, including connectivity, blending Indigenous and academic science approaches, new technology for biodiversity monitoring and/or human- wildlife conflict management, past human relationships with American Keystones, and cutting-edge approaches to managing systems for change.
Funding Information
The funding request is up to $20,000.
Grant Period
Projects must be planned to run for one to two years.
Who should apply?
- Individuals working on projects focused on implementing conservation actions or conducting research intended to inform the conservation and management of ecological, cultural, or economic keystone species in the United States and territories.
- Ecological keystone: a species with a disproportionate impact on an ecosystem
- Cultural keystone: a species with a disproportionate impact on cultural identity
- Economic keystone: a species with a disproportionate impact on economic development
- These grants are available to individuals new to the National Geographic network, as well as individuals in the network but not yet Explorers, including team members on previous grants and recipients of discretionary funding opportunities.
- Priority will be given to projects that aim to do one or more of the following:
- Specific and defensible priority actions to avert a keystone species decline
- Projects focused on keystone species of more than one type. For example: species that are ecologically and culturally important, or culturally and economically important, etc.
- Projects led by local community members implementing conservation actions through traditional knowledge or projects using an approach that blends Indigenous knowledge and academic science and research approaches.
For more information, visit National Geographic Society.