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South Texas Plains Ecoregion
Wildlife Management Plan for Jim Hogg County, Texas
Jim Hogg County spans the boundary between the Southern Texas Plains and Western Gulf Coastal Plain, with 73 documented wildlife species.
Intelligence Snapshot
Regulatory Complexity
Jim Hogg County has elevated conservation considerations that affect wildlife management planning. The 3 federally listed species documented here mean that brush management, water development, and habitat modification must be designed with ESA compliance in mind. A properly calibrated plan accounts for these constraints. A generic plan does not.
Jim Hogg County Ecological Profile
Jim Hogg County covers 1,136 square miles of the South Texas Plains, a substantial section of thornscrub brushlands and caliche ridges. This is the region that produces the trophy bucks that drive a multi-billion dollar hunting economy, and wildlife management here has been refined over generations of South Texas ranching families. Brush management in South Texas is surgical, not wholesale. The goal is brush sculpting: creating interspersed senderos and dense cover patches that maximize edge habitat for deer and quail, not clearing everything to bare ground.
Brush management in the South Texas Plains is surgical. Unlike regions where the goal is broad-scale brush removal, management here focuses on sculpting brush patterns to create the interspersion of dense cover and open senderos that maximize edge habitat for deer and quail. Root-plowing and roller-chopping in alternating strips, combined with prescribed fire on a 3 to 5 year rotation, creates the mosaic of successional stages that wildlife requires. Supplemental feeding is widespread, and protein feeders placed at strategic locations help maintain deer body condition and antler development through the nutritionally stressful late-summer months. Water management is critical in this semi-arid region, with windmill-fed stock tanks, solar-powered wildlife waterers, and rainwater catchments distributed across the landscape to ensure no animal is more than half a mile from water.
Transitional Ecoregion
Jim Hogg County spans the boundary between the Southern Texas Plains and Western Gulf Coastal Plain. Species assemblages, soil types, and appropriate management intensities differ between these regions. A property in the Southern Texas Plains portion of the county will require different practices than one in the Western Gulf Coastal Plain zone.
Soil Conditions
Soils range from deep, loamy Duval and Miguel series on the Coastal Sand Sheet to shallow, calcareous Webb and Maverick clays on caliche-capped uplands, with saline Montell clays along the Rio Grande floodplain.
Fire Ecology
Fire plays a secondary role to mechanical brush management in the South Texas Plains, where thornscrub species resprout aggressively from the root crown. Prescribed fire is most effective on sandy soils where it can top-kill herbaceous weeds and young brush regrowth following mechanical treatment.
Spans 2 ecoregions: Southern Texas Plains, Western Gulf Coastal Plain
White-tailed deer management drives the economy of the South Texas Plains, with mature bucks regularly scoring above 150 inches on the Boone and Crockett scale. Northern bobwhite and scaled quail populations fluctuate dramatically with rainfall, and intensive habitat management can buffer these swings. Javelina, nilgai antelope (an exotic from India now established in several South Texas counties), and feral hog are common ungulates requiring active population management. Rio Grande wild turkey thrives in the brushlands along creek corridors. Ocelot and jaguarundi, two federally endangered cats, survive in the dense thornscrub of the lower Rio Grande Valley, making brush retention along wildlife corridors a conservation priority.
Jim Hogg County Species of Conservation Concern
TPWD records 73 species in Jim Hogg County. Birds represent the most documented group at 26 species. The 3 federally listed and 15 state-protected species documented here represent meaningful regulatory considerations for any land management activity. Federally listed species include ocelot and ashy dogweed. Ocelot: Requires dense thornscrub corridors for movement between habitat patches in the lower Rio Grande Valley and coastal counties.
Primary Management Targets
white-tailed deer, bobwhite quail, javelina, wild turkey
Listed Species
Requires dense thornscrub corridors for movement between habitat patches in the lower Rio Grande Valley and coastal counties. Brush retention along wildlife corridors is a conservation priority. Road crossings are a primary mortality source; wildlife underpasses may be required for road projects.
Endemic to clay soils in a few South Texas counties. Agricultural conversion and herbicide application are primary threats.
Western distinct population segment is threatened. Requires large patches of mature riparian woodland (cottonwood, willow) with dense understory. Clearing riparian corridors wider than 300 feet may trigger consultation in designated critical habitat.
Nests on bare sand and gravel bars along rivers and reservoirs. Disturbance during nesting season (May through August) must be avoided. Water level management at reservoirs affects nesting success.
Requires dense thornscrub corridors for movement between habitat patches in the lower Rio Grande Valley and coastal counties. Brush retention along wildlife corridors is a conservation priority. Road crossings are a primary mortality source; wildlife underpasses may be required for road projects.
Endemic to clay soils in a few South Texas counties. Agricultural conversion and herbicide application are primary threats.
Depends on harvester ant colonies for food. Fire ant suppression and native grassland restoration directly benefit this species. Listed as state threatened.
Found in South Texas brushlands and western Edwards Plateau. Slow-moving and vulnerable to road mortality and habitat clearing. Translocation may be required before land clearing in occupied habitat.
Source: Texas Parks & Wildlife Department RTEST Database; U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Critical Habitat Designations
South Texas Plains Wildlife Management Standards
In Jim Hogg County, brush management is surgical. The objective is sculpting brush patterns to maximize edge habitat for deer and quail, not clearing brush to bare ground. Under 34 TAC Section 9.2002, the South Texas Plains ecoregion requires 20 to 30 minimum acres, 15% brush management coverage, and annual wildlife census documentation. Primary targets are white-tailed deer, bobwhite quail, and javelina. Practice recommendations should reflect each property's specific landscape position within the county.
These are the intensity thresholds your plan must meet for the South Texas Plains ecoregion. Your county appraisal district will verify compliance against these minimums. A plan that does not address them risks denial of your wildlife management valuation. For a complete overview of the seven management pillars, see the management pillars guide.
In Jim Hogg County, brush management targets mesquite canopy reduction while retaining enough woody cover for wildlife escape habitat.
Food plots must provide nutritional supplementation for target species. The minimum size and density are set by ecoregion to reflect carrying capacity.
Feeder placement and protein content are auditable. The aflatoxin threshold (20 ppb) is a compliance requirement, not a suggestion.
Fire ant suppression directly supports native harvester ant populations, the primary food source for Texas horned lizard and other ground-foraging species.
Brown-headed cowbirds are brood parasites that reduce nesting success of songbirds. The minimum applies to properties where cowbird trapping is selected as a management activity.
The burn rotation percentage applies over the full plan period. Properties that cannot burn due to WUI constraints must document the limitation and substitute equivalent mechanical treatment.
Nest box density is based on territory size of target cavity-nesting species. Boxes must be monitored and maintained annually.
Source: TPWD 34 TAC Section 9.2002, Comprehensive Wildlife Management Planning Guidelines
Water Resources
3 Groundwater Conservation Districts regulate water resources in the county, with permitting requirements for new wells and production limits that affect agricultural and wildlife management water sources.
Infrastructure
Jim Hogg County has substantial oil and gas infrastructure: 5,089 documented wells across 16 categories and 666 pipeline segments recorded by the Railroad Commission. 11 orphan wells are on the Railroad Commission's plugging priority list.
73 species in 1136 square miles of thornscrub. In Jim Hogg County, the brush is the habitat. The plan shapes it rather than clearing it.
Build your Jim Hogg County wildlife management plan.
2 ecoregions. 73 documented species. Jim Hogg County's ecological complexity means the plan has to be specific to your property's landscape position. Calibrated to South Texas Plains standards.
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