Edwards Plateau Ecoregion

Wildlife Management Plan
Kerr County

A TPWD-compliant 5-year wildlife management plan built for the landscape, soils, and species of Kerr County, Texas. Addressing 105 tracked species across 14.2+ acres of Edwards Plateau habitat.

Property Intelligence Snapshot

14.220

Minimum Acres

105

Tracked Species

9

Federally Listed

18

State Listed

20%

Brush Mgmt Coverage

1/100ac

Food Plots

2/100ac

Water Sources

annual

Census Frequency

Managing Land in Kerr County

The Edwards Plateau is the limestone backbone of the Texas Hill Country, a karst landscape of spring-fed creeks, steep canyons, and rocky uplands covered in a mosaic of Ashe juniper, live oak, and Texas red oak. The region sits atop one of the most productive aquifer systems in the world, and its thin, rocky soils conceal a vast network of caves, sinkholes, and underground streams that support an extraordinary community of endemic invertebrates found nowhere else on Earth. This is where Texas ranching tradition meets some of the state's most sensitive ecological systems.

Cedar management is the dominant wildlife management activity on the Edwards Plateau, but it must be approached with nuance. While dense Ashe juniper mottes suppress native grass production and reduce spring flow, the golden-cheeked warbler, federally listed as endangered, nests exclusively in mature stands of Ashe juniper with shredding bark. Effective management removes regrowth juniper from grassland and savannah areas while protecting mature juniper in canyon bottoms and steep slopes where the warbler nests. Brush sculpting, rather than blanket clearing, is the standard of care. Supplemental water development is critical on the plateau, where thin soils and fractured limestone create limited surface water retention. Rainwater collection systems and small impoundments along seasonal drainages provide water for deer, turkey, and upland birds during the dry months of late summer.

The Edwards Plateau harbors the highest concentration of endemic species in Texas. The golden-cheeked warbler breeds only in central Texas juniper-oak woodlands, and the black-capped vireo nests in low, scrubby vegetation on rocky hillsides. Below ground, dozens of cave-adapted invertebrate species, including Tooth Cave spider, Bone Cave harvestman, and several cave-adapted beetles, depend on the integrity of the karst system. White-tailed deer populations on the plateau are among the densest in North America, and intensive harvest management is often necessary to prevent overbrowing of native forbs and browse species like Texas kidneywood and agarito.

Soil Conditions

Soils are characteristically thin and rocky, with Tarrant, Brackett, and Real series limestones predominating on uplands and deeper Krum and Lewisville silty clays along creek bottoms in the eastern reaches.

Fire Ecology

Fire historically swept the plateau grasslands at 3 to 5 year intervals, maintaining open savannahs between juniper-oak mottes. Prescribed fire in combination with mechanical brush management is the most effective approach to restoring native grassland on juniper-invaded sites.

Species of Conservation Concern

Kerr County supports 105 tracked species including 9 federally listed and 18 state-listed species. The following are representative species from TPWD records for this county.

Primary Management Targets

white-tailed deergolden-cheeked warblerblack-capped vireo

Amphibians

  • Woodhouse's toadAnaxyrus woodhousii
  • Valdina Farms sinkhole salamanderEurycea troglodytes
  • Texas salamanderEurycea neotenes
  • Cascade Caverns salamanderEurycea latitans
  • Strecker's chorus frogPseudacris streckeri

Arachnids

  • Undescribed speciesCicurina pastura
  • Undescribed speciesCicurina stowersi
  • Undescribed speciesTexella hardeni

What You Receive

Every plan is calibrated to Kerr County conditions. Same transparent pricing, whether your property is 14.2 acres or 10,000.

PWD-885 Wildlife Plan

Complete 5-year wildlife management plan on the official TPWD form, customized for the Edwards Plateau ecoregion intensity standards that apply to Kerr 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. Kerr County currently tracks 105 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: 20% 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 Kerr County Plan

Frequently Asked Questions

How many acres do I need for a wildlife management plan in Kerr County?
In Kerr County, TPWD intensity standards for the Edwards Plateau ecoregion require a minimum of 14.2 to 20 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 Kerr County?
Kerr County falls within the Edwards Plateau ecoregion and supports 105 tracked species including 9 federally listed and 18 state-listed species. Common management targets include white-tailed deer, golden-cheeked warbler, black-capped vireo. Your plan should address species appropriate to your specific property conditions.
How much does a wildlife management plan cost for Kerr County?
Thorpe Land Services offers acreage-based pricing for a TPWD-compliant 5-year wildlife management plan covering any Texas county, including Kerr 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 Kerr County?
Yes. Texas Tax Code Section 23.521 allows landowners in Kerr 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 Edwards Plateau ecoregion?
For Kerr County in the Edwards Plateau ecoregion, TPWD standards include 20% 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 Kerr County Land?

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