Close up of greater sage grouse. Photo by Bob Wick, BLM.

Greater sage-grouse

The BLM manages the largest single share of greater sage-grouse habitat in the United States nearly 67 million of 145 million acres total. These same lands sustain Western rural economies built on outdoor recreation, ranching, farming, energy development and small businesses, and are critical for more than 350 other wildlife species  including pronghorn, mule deer and the pygmy rabbit. They are also the headwaters for the West's major river systems. 

For decades, federal, state and private land managers have worked to conserve and restore the sagebrush ecosystem, with federal agencies managing habitat on the lands whose surface they administer and states managing and monitoring wildlife populations.
 

Moving forward to conserve habitat 


The greater sage-grouse is in sharp decline. Populations once in the millions now number fewer than 800,000, largely due to habitat loss exacerbated by climate change effects, such as drought, increasing wildfires and the spread of invasive species

We have announced a proposal to strengthen greater sage-grouse protections on public lands, informed by the best-available science and input from local, state and federal partners.  
 

The final environmental impact statement and proposed amendments were published on November 8, 2024. Protests may be filed from November 15 through December 16, 2024. 

Federal Register Notice : Nov. 15, 2024  |  Filing a protest 


Even as we engage in planning, the BLM continues to invest in habitat treatments, to restore critical areas and make remaining habitat more resilient to various stressors and threats. 
 


 

a low view of people standing in a grassy field
Plans for conserving greater sage-grouse habitat on public lands were adopted in 2015 to avert a listing under the Endangered Species Act. Now, the BLM is considering what more can be done to reverse population declines.

Habitat in Season 

sagebrush in seed under blue skies
In the fall, sagebrush produces seeds which are dispersed by the wind or through the digestive tracts of the animals that eat them.
USFWS / Theo Stein