Pineywoods Ecoregion

Wildlife Management Plan
Cherokee County

A TPWD-compliant 5-year wildlife management plan built for the landscape, soils, and species of Cherokee County, Texas. Addressing 83 tracked species across 10+ acres of Pineywoods habitat.

Property Intelligence Snapshot

1015

Minimum Acres

83

Tracked Species

11

Federally Listed

21

State Listed

25%

Brush Mgmt Coverage

3/100ac

Food Plots

1/100ac

Water Sources

annual

Census Frequency

Managing Land in Cherokee County

The Pineywoods of East Texas is a deeply forested landscape where loblolly pine, shortleaf pine, and bottomland hardwoods dominate rolling hills cut by sand-bottomed creeks. Annual rainfall regularly exceeds 45 inches, supporting a layered canopy of pine overstory, midstory hardwoods like sweetgum and red oak, and a dense understory of yaupon holly and American beautyberry. This is timber country, but it is also one of the most biologically diverse regions in the state.

Effective wildlife management in the Pineywoods centers on restoring and maintaining an open, park-like pine savannah structure through prescribed fire and selective timber harvest. Decades of fire suppression have allowed yaupon holly, Chinese tallow, and dense hardwood midstory to crowd out native grasses and forbs critical to ground-nesting birds and browsing deer. A well-designed burn plan on a 2 to 3 year rotation, combined with mechanical midstory removal, reopens the understory, stimulates native warm-season grasses like little bluestem and Indiangrass, and creates the open, herbaceous ground cover that eastern wild turkey, bobwhite quail, and red-cockaded woodpecker require. Streamside management zones protecting riparian corridors along the region's blackwater creeks are essential for amphibian diversity and water quality.

The Pineywoods supports a remarkable range of species of conservation concern. The red-cockaded woodpecker, federally listed as endangered, depends on mature longleaf and loblolly pine stands with open understories. Louisiana pine snake, another federally listed species, requires deep sandy soils with pocket gopher colonies. Bottomland hardwood corridors provide habitat for swallow-tailed kite, timber rattlesnake, and several rare salamander species including the southern dusky salamander. Managing for these species means managing the forest structure itself: keeping canopies open, maintaining snag trees for cavity nesters, and protecting the integrity of seepage bogs and spring-fed headwater streams.

Soil Conditions

Soils are predominantly deep, acidic sandy loams and fine sands of the Darco, Tenaha, and Kirvin series, with clay subsoils that create perched water tables in bottomlands.

Fire Ecology

Fire is the defining ecological process. The Pineywoods evolved under frequent, low-intensity fire at 1 to 4 year intervals. Restoring fire through prescribed burning is the single most impactful management practice for native plant and wildlife communities.

Species of Conservation Concern

Cherokee County supports 83 tracked species including 11 federally listed and 21 state-listed species. The following are representative species from TPWD records for this county.

Primary Management Targets

white-tailed deerred-cockaded woodpeckerwild turkey

Birds

  • Brown PelicanPelecanus occidentalis
  • swallow-tailed kiteElanoides forficatus
  • white-faced ibisPlegadis chihi

Amphibians

  • southern crawfish frogLithobates areolatus areolatus
  • Strecker's chorus frogPseudacris streckeri
  • spotted dusky salamanderDesmognathus conanti
  • eastern tiger salamanderAmbystoma tigrinum
  • Gulf Coast waterdogNecturus beyeri

What You Receive

Every plan is calibrated to Cherokee County conditions. Same transparent pricing, whether your property is 10 acres or 10,000.

PWD-885 Wildlife Plan

Complete 5-year wildlife management plan on the official TPWD form, customized for the Pineywoods ecoregion intensity standards that apply to Cherokee County.

Property Analysis

Parcel boundary mapping, soil survey overlay, aerial imagery review, and habitat classification for your specific tract.

Species Inventory

County-level T&E species analysis using TPWD RTEST data. Cherokee County currently tracks 83 species of conservation concern.

Management Prescriptions

Specific, actionable management recommendations for each of the seven TPWD activity categories, written for your property's ecoregion and soil conditions.

Intensity Standards

Ecoregion-calibrated minimums: 25% brush management, 3 food plot(s) per 100 acres, 1 water source(s) per 100 acres.

CAD-Ready Deliverable

Formatted for submission to your county appraisal district. Includes all required documentation, property maps, and supporting materials.

All 254 Texas counties. Plans from $149. Price based on your acreage.

Start Your Cherokee County Plan

State Parks in Cherokee County

Properties near state parks and natural areas often benefit from proximity to established wildlife corridors and protected habitat. The following TPWD-managed areas are located in Cherokee County.

Mission Tejas State Park

TPWD Managed Area

Frequently Asked Questions

How many acres do I need for a wildlife management plan in Cherokee County?
In Cherokee County, TPWD intensity standards for the Pineywoods ecoregion require a minimum of 10 to 15 acres depending on the management activities you select. Properties below this threshold may still qualify through cooperative management agreements with adjacent landowners.
What species should I manage for in Cherokee County?
Cherokee County falls within the Pineywoods ecoregion and supports 83 tracked species including 11 federally listed and 21 state-listed species. Common management targets include white-tailed deer, red-cockaded woodpecker, wild turkey. Your plan should address species appropriate to your specific property conditions.
How much does a wildlife management plan cost for Cherokee County?
Thorpe Land Services offers acreage-based pricing for a TPWD-compliant 5-year wildlife management plan covering any Texas county, including Cherokee County. This includes the complete PWD-885 Wildlife Management Plan form, property-specific management recommendations, species inventory, and ecoregion-calibrated intensity standards. Visit the builder page for current pricing.
Can I switch from an agricultural exemption to wildlife management in Cherokee County?
Yes. Texas Tax Code Section 23.521 allows landowners in Cherokee County to convert from traditional agricultural use to wildlife management use while maintaining their 1-d-1 open-space valuation. The property must have qualified for ag valuation for at least one of the previous five years, and you must conduct at least three of the seven TPWD management activities.
What are the TPWD intensity standards for the Pineywoods ecoregion?
For Cherokee County in the Pineywoods ecoregion, TPWD standards include 25% brush management coverage, 3 food plot(s) per 100 acres, 1 supplemental water source(s) per 100 acres, and annual wildlife census requirements.

Ready to Protect Your Cherokee County Land?

Build your 5-year wildlife management plan today. TPWD-compliant, calibrated to Pineywoods ecoregion standards, and ready for submission to your county appraisal district.