High Plains Ecoregion

Wildlife Management Plan
Hartley County

A TPWD-compliant 5-year wildlife management plan built for the landscape, soils, and species of Hartley County, Texas. Addressing 37 tracked species across 30+ acres of High Plains habitat.

Property Intelligence Snapshot

3050

Minimum Acres

37

Tracked Species

2

Federally Listed

3

State Listed

10%

Brush Mgmt Coverage

1/100ac

Food Plots

2/100ac

Water Sources

annual

Census Frequency

Managing Land in Hartley County

The High Plains of the Texas Panhandle is a vast, flat landscape of short-grass prairie and irrigated cropland sitting atop the Ogallala Aquifer. Buffalo grass, blue grama, and sideoats grama once covered millions of acres, grazed by bison and pronghorn. Today, much of the region has been converted to irrigated cotton, grain sorghum, and wheat, with remaining native rangeland fragmented by center-pivot irrigation circles and wind energy development. Playa lakes, the region's signature wetland feature, dot the landscape by the thousands, providing critical habitat for migrating waterfowl and shorebirds.

Wildlife management on the High Plains centers on playa lake conservation, CRP grassland management, and rangeland restoration. Playa lakes are the primary recharge mechanism for the Ogallala Aquifer and the single most important wildlife habitat feature in the region. Protecting playas from sedimentation caused by tillage on surrounding cropland, maintaining native grass buffers around playa margins, and managing water levels through careful grazing are essential practices. On CRP contracts converting to wildlife management valuation, landowners should maintain the established grass cover, introduce prescribed fire or patch burning to create structural diversity, and install wildlife-friendly fencing that allows pronghorn passage. Mesquite and prickly pear encroachment on native rangeland requires periodic mechanical treatment followed by targeted herbicide application.

The lesser prairie chicken, listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act, is the flagship species of the High Plains. This grouse depends on native shinnery oak and mid-grass prairie for nesting and brood-rearing, and its populations have declined sharply due to habitat conversion and fragmentation from wind energy development. Pronghorn, the fastest land mammal in North America, requires large, open landscapes with minimal fencing. Mountain plover nests on bare, disturbed ground in short-grass prairie and fallow fields. Swift fox, burrowing owl, and ferruginous hawk round out a community of grassland specialists that benefit from maintaining large, connected tracts of native rangeland.

Soil Conditions

Soils are deep, calcareous loams and clay loams of the Pullman, Sherm, and Amarillo series, formed in Ogallala Formation deposits and capable of high agricultural productivity under irrigation.

Fire Ecology

The High Plains historically burned at 5 to 10 year intervals, driven by lightning and maintained by vast, ungrazed grasslands. Prescribed fire remains valuable for managing CRP stands and preventing mesquite encroachment, though wind and low humidity require careful burn planning.

Species of Conservation Concern

Hartley County supports 37 tracked species including 2 federally listed and 3 state-listed species. The following are representative species from TPWD records for this county.

Primary Management Targets

lesser prairie-chickenpronghornmule deer

Birds

  • bald eagleHaliaeetus leucocephalus
  • white-faced ibisPlegadis chihi
  • Northern BobwhiteColinus virginianus
  • Scaled QuailCallipepla squamata
  • golden eagleAquila chrysaetos
  • Snowy PloverCharadrius nivosus
  • SanderlingCalidris alba

Amphibians

  • Woodhouse's toadAnaxyrus woodhousii

What You Receive

Every plan is calibrated to Hartley County conditions. Same transparent pricing, whether your property is 30 acres or 10,000.

PWD-885 Wildlife Plan

Complete 5-year wildlife management plan on the official TPWD form, customized for the High Plains ecoregion intensity standards that apply to Hartley 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. Hartley County currently tracks 37 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: 10% brush management, 1 food plot(s) per 100 acres, 2 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 Hartley County Plan

Frequently Asked Questions

How many acres do I need for a wildlife management plan in Hartley County?
In Hartley County, TPWD intensity standards for the High Plains ecoregion require a minimum of 30 to 50 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 Hartley County?
Hartley County falls within the High Plains ecoregion and supports 37 tracked species including 2 federally listed and 3 state-listed species. Common management targets include lesser prairie-chicken, pronghorn, mule deer. Your plan should address species appropriate to your specific property conditions.
How much does a wildlife management plan cost for Hartley County?
Thorpe Land Services offers acreage-based pricing for a TPWD-compliant 5-year wildlife management plan covering any Texas county, including Hartley 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 Hartley County?
Yes. Texas Tax Code Section 23.521 allows landowners in Hartley 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 High Plains ecoregion?
For Hartley County in the High Plains ecoregion, TPWD standards include 10% brush management coverage, 1 food plot(s) per 100 acres, 2 supplemental water source(s) per 100 acres, and annual wildlife census requirements.

Ready to Protect Your Hartley County Land?

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