Habitat control is the most commonly practiced of the seven wildlife management activities recognized by the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department (TPWD). It involves actively managing the vegetation on your property to create and maintain quality habitat for native wildlife species. For most Texas landowners with a wildlife exemption, habitat control forms the backbone of their wildlife management plan.
What Qualifies as Habitat Control?
Habitat control encompasses any activity that modifies the plant community on your property to benefit wildlife. This includes removing invasive species, managing brush density, restoring native grasses, conducting prescribed burns, and managing grazing intensity to maintain healthy rangeland for wildlife.
The goal is to create a mosaic of habitat types — open grasslands for foraging, brush thickets for cover, wooded areas for nesting, and edge habitat where different vegetation types meet. Wildlife thrives in diversity, not monocultures.
Habitat Control Activities for Your Annual Report
Mechanical brush management
Using equipment (skid-steers, bulldozers, chainsaws) to clear invasive brush like cedar, mesquite, or huisache. Target areas where brush has encroached on native grasslands, reducing wildlife food sources and movement corridors.
Chemical brush management
Selective herbicide application to control invasive species. Individual plant treatment (IPT) is preferred over broadcast spraying because it preserves desirable native plants.
Prescribed burning
Controlled burns to remove accumulated dead vegetation, stimulate new growth, and restore fire-adapted ecosystems. Prescribed burning is highly effective in most Texas ecoregions but requires a burn plan and compliance with county burn regulations.
Native grass reseeding
Planting native grass species after brush clearing or on disturbed ground. Use seed mixes appropriate for your ecoregion — your county NRCS office can recommend species.
Grazing management
Adjusting livestock stocking rates, implementing rotational grazing, or deferring grazing during critical wildlife nesting periods (April through August in most ecoregions). Overgrazing destroys ground-nesting bird habitat.
Invasive species removal
Targeting non-native plants like King Ranch bluestem, KR bluestem, Chinese tallow, or giant reed that outcompete native vegetation and provide poor wildlife value.
How to Document Habitat Control
When documenting habitat control, include the specific method used, equipment involved, acreage treated, location on the property, and the wildlife management purpose. Take before-and-after photos from the same vantage point — this is the most convincing evidence for your appraiser. For prescribed burns, keep your burn plan, weather records, and any permits on file.
WildComply Tip: Log each habitat control activity in the app immediately after performing it. Attach GPS-tagged photos while you're still on site — your phone captures the timestamp and coordinates automatically, creating verifiable evidence for your annual report.
Ecoregion Considerations
TPWD's intensity guidelines vary significantly by ecoregion. In the Edwards Plateau, the recommended brush management intensity is 10-15% of total acreage per year. In the South Texas Plains, mesquite management may need to target 5-10% annually. Check the Comprehensive Wildlife Management Planning Guidelines for your specific ecoregion.
Track Habitat Control Activities Automatically
WildComply makes it easy to log habitat control with GPS-tagged photos and generates your PWD-888 annual report when filing season arrives.
Start Your Free TrialOther Wildlife Management Practices
Texas requires at least 3 of 7 wildlife management practices each year. Explore the other qualifying practices:
2. Erosion Control
Terracing, vegetative buffers, reseeding bare areas, and trail management to protect soil and water ...
3. Predator Control
Feral hog trapping, coyote management, egg predator control, and monitoring to protect wildlife popu...
4. Supplemental Water
Wildlife-friendly stock tanks, guzzlers, drip systems, and spring development to ensure year-round w...
5. Supplemental Food
Food plots, wildlife feeders, mineral licks, and native forage management to support wildlife nutrit...
6. Supplemental Shelter
Nest boxes, brush piles, rock structures, bat houses, and dead snag preservation to provide wildlife...
7. Census Counts
Spotlight surveys, trail camera monitoring, bird point counts, breeding surveys, and harvest data an...