Texas Water Resources Institute

Fort Hood Range Revegetation

Located on the northern edge of the Texas Hill Country, Fort Hood Military Reservation is characterized by rolling hills, shallow soils, woodlands, prairies and rocky streams. Yet, 60 years of training activities with ground-combat vehicles have disturbed its training land ecosystems, creating significant soil erosion and water quality issues.

The U.S. Department of the Army and U.S. Department of Defense are keenly interested in integrating sound stewardship practices with the requirements of their training missions. The Texas Water Resources Institute and Texas Agricultural Experiment Station Blackland Research and Extension Center, working through the Rangeland Revegetation Pilot Project and in close collaboration with the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service, and Fort Hood’s Integrated Training Land Management and Directorate of Public Works, seek to develop and implement best management practices (BMPs) and guides for restoration of the installation’s training lands ecosystems.

The military has used Fort Hood’s West Range, with more than 67,000 acres, as its primary training and maneuver area for two armored divisions. Restoration of this range serves to provide: 1) maintenance of quality training lands for military personnel, 2) maintenance and improvement of the natural resource base, and 3) protection of watersheds and improvements in water quality of supply reservoirs.

In addition to rangeland restoration, the project removes dairy manure byproducts from the Bosque River Watershed, addressing water quality concerns and assisting in meeting that impaired watershed’s Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) requirements.

Objectives

Component

Accomplishments

The number one accomplishment of the project is improving training conditions for U.S. Army soldiers.

Collaborators

Funding Agency

Texas A&M AgriLife | Texas A&M System | State of Texas | Web Accessibility & Privacy