FROM THE U.S. DEPT. OF INTERIOR
SECRETARY NORTON ANNOUNCES MORE THAN $70 MILLION
IN GRANTS TO SUPPORT LAND ACQUISITION AND CONSERVATION PLANNING FOR
ENDANGERED SPECIES
Interior Secretary Gale Norton today announced more than $70
million in grants to 28 states and one territory to support
conservation planning and acquisition of vital habitat for
threatened and endangered fish, wildlife and plant
species. The grants will benefit species ranging from the Delmarva
fox squirrel in the East to peninsular bighorn sheep in the West.
“The strength of our partnership with the states is clearly
one of the keys to the Bush Administration’s success in
conserving and recovering threatened and endangered species
throughout this country,” Norton said. “Today’s grant awards
support state efforts to build and strengthen important
cost-effective conservation partnerships with local groups and private
landowners to benefit wildlife.”
Funded through the Cooperative Endangered Species
Conservation Fund and authorized by Section 6 of the
Endangered Species Act, the grants will enable states to work
with private landowners, conservation groups and other
agencies to initiate conservation planning efforts and acquire and protect
habitat to support the conservation of threatened and endangered species.
The Cooperative Endangered Species Fund this year provides
$49 million through the Habitat Conservation Plan Land
Acquisition Grants Program, $8.6 million through the Habitat
Conservation Planning Assistance Grants Program and $13.5
million through the Recovery Land Acquisition Grants Program.
The three programs were established to help reduce potential conflicts
between the conservation of threatened and endangered species and
land development and use.
"These grant programs are some of the many tools we have to
help landowners conserve valuable wildlife habitats in the
day-to-day management of their lands," U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service Director Steve Williams said. "They help
landowners finance the creative solutions to land use and
conservation issues that ultimately lead to the recovery of endangered
and threatened species."
Under the Habitat Conservation Plan Land Acquisition Program,
the Service provides grants to states or territories for land
acquisitions associated with approved Habitat Conservation
Plans. Grants do not fund any mitigation required of an HCP
permittee, but are instead intended to support acquisitions by
the state or local governments that complement actions
associated with the HCP.
A Habitat Conservation Plan is an agreement between a
landowner and the Service that allows the landowner to
incidentally take a threatened or endangered species in the
course of otherwise lawful activities when the landowner
agrees to conservation measures to minimize and mitigate the impact
of the taking. A Habitat Conservation Plan may also be
developed by a county or state to cover certain activities of
all landowners within their jurisdiction and may address
multiple species. There are more than 357 Habitat
Conservation Plans currently in effect, covering 458 separate species
on approximately 39 million acres, with some 407 additional plans under
development, covering approximately 100 million acres.
Among recipients of today's Habitat Conservation Land
Acquisition grants is Scotland County,
North Carolina with a $1.9
million grant to acquire and manage land that will aid in the
recovery of the North Carolina Sandhills West population of
the federally-endangered red-cockaded woodpecker. In
addition to the woodpecker, the acquisition will enable North
Carolina to increase the intensity of
restoration and management of
the longleaf pine habitat in the area.
The Habitat Conservation Planning Assistance Program provides
grants to states and territories to support the development of
Habitat Conservation Plans, through funding of baseline
surveys and inventories, document preparation, outreach and similar
planning activities.
Of today’s grants, more than $380,000 will fund Colorado’s
efforts in developing a Habitat Conservation Plan to conserve
the southwestern willow flycatcher in the San
Luis Valley
in Alamosa, Conejos, Mineral, Rio Grande
and Saguache counties. The Plan will cover about two million
acres and 150 stream miles. Not only will it benefit the
flycatcher, but also the bald eagle and the yellow-billed
cuckoo.
The Recovery Land Acquisition Grants Program provides funds
to states and territories to acquire habitat for endangered
and threatened species in approved recovery plans. Acquisition
of habitat to secure long-term protection is often an
essential element of a comprehensive recovery effort for a
listed species.
One of these grants will provide $500,000 for acquisition of lands near
the Machias River
in Hancock and Washington
Counties in Maine.
The acquisition of the 47 miles of lakeshore and 13 miles of
stream frontage will benefit Atlantic salmon rearing and
spawning habitat as well as a bald eagle nesting site.
For more information on the 2004 grant awards for these programs (Catalog
of Domestic Federal Assistance Number 15.615), see the Fish and Wildlife
Service’s Endangered Species home page at http://endangered.fws.gov/grants/section6/index.html.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is the principal federal agency responsible
for conserving, protecting and enhancing fish, wildlife and plants
and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the American people.
The Service manages the 95-million-acre National Wildlife Refuge System,
which encompasses 542 national wildlife refuges, thousands of small
wetlands and other special management areas. It also operates 70
national fish hatcheries, 64 fishery resource offices and 81
ecological services field stations. The agency enforces
federal wildlife laws, administers the Endangered Species Act,
manages migratory bird populations, restores nationally
significant fisheries, conserves and restores wildlife habitat
such as wetlands, and helps foreign governments
with their conservation efforts. It also oversees the Federal
Aid program that distributes hundreds of millions of dollars
in excise taxes on fishing and hunting equipment to state fish
and wildlife agencies.
NOTE: A complete list of grants follows.
Secretary Norton will hold a press teleconference on Thursday,
September 23 at 2p.m. to
discuss the grants. During this call she will be joined
by Lynn Scarlett, Assistant Secretary for Policy, Management
and Budget, and Steve Williams, Director of the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service. Media representatives may join the call
by calling 866-261-3331.
Habitat Conservation
Plan Land
Acquisition Grants by State:
California
· Assessment District 161 HCP (Riverside
County, CA)
$4,545,000. The grant will support the purchase of
habitat within the Wilson/Cactus Valley area. The
acquisition of properties in Wilson/Cactus Valley will benefit wildlife
populations by conserving occupied habitat in large, interconnected
blocks, ensuring that the ecosystem processes are maintained.
In addition to providing core habitat areas for the Western Riverside
Multiple Species Habitat Conservation Program (MSHCP), both of these
areas support a suite of Federal and State listed species covered under
the MSHCP. These species include the threatened coastal California gnatcatcher,
endangered least Bell’s
vireo, Quino checkerspot butterfly, and Stephen’s kangaroo
rat. The plant communities found in the area, such as
Riversidean sage scrub and riparian habitat, are representative of
the original, native habitats of the region. The public
benefits of maintaining these areas as open space include the
use for various recreational purposes such as hiking, mountain
biking and other appropriate activities.
· City of San Diego
and County of San Diego Multiple Species Conservation Program
NCCP/HCP (San Diego County, CA)
$4,402,238. The grant will be used to acquire parcels of
land on Otay Mesa that make up a large part of the southern
portion of lands within the Multi-Habitat Planning Area
(MHPA), the City of San Diego’s
targeted preserve area under the Multiple Species Conservation
Program (MSCP). Because of their size and
location, the parcels are crucial for protecting the integrity of
the MHPA along the U.S./Mexico border and for connecting the
southern portion to other MHPA areas to the north. The
parcels support a number of listed and rare habitats and
species, including the threatened coastal California gnatcatcher,
burrowing owl, cactus wren, and species endemic to the San Diego
region such as San Diego
barrel cactus and snake chollas. There are several
vernal pools on the parcels, some of which support the federally listed
endangered San Diego
fairy shrimp, California
orcutt grass and San Diego
button celery. Acquisition of the Crest Tract is a high
priority for San Diego
County's MSCP.
The Crest Tract supports threatened California
gnatcatcher and San Diego
thornmint, and provides upland habitat for the federally
listed arroyo toad. In addition, numerous other MSCP
covered species are known in the area. The Crest tract
provides a key linkage between the San Diego National Wildlife
Refuge to the south and the State-owned Crestridge
Preserve. This approximately 1,400 acre tract includes
numerous parcels, which if allowed to develop, would result in
a fragmented landscape that will preclude connectivity between two large
conserved areas.
· Colton
Transmission Line HCP (San Bernardino
and Riverside Counties, CA)
$1,500,000. This grant will support the purchase of habitat within
the Colton Dune ecosystem. The proposed acquisitions are
intended to protect portions of the Colton Dune ecosystem,
unique to this region of Riverside and
San Bernardino
counties. Approximately two percent of the Colton Dune ecosystem
still exists. The proposed acquisitions will
permanently conserve habitat occupied by a suite of federally
and State listed species native to this area including the
endangered Delhi Sands flower-loving fly, the threatened
coastal California
gnatcatcher, the Los Angeles
pocket mouse and the western burrowing owl. These lands
are critical to the survival and recovery of the Delhi Sands
flower-loving fly and many other species that occur within
this ecosystem. The Delhi Sands flower-loving fly and
its habitat are addressed in the Western Riverside MSHCP and possibly
in the regional multiple species habitat conservation plan in San Bernardino
County.
Conservation of these areas will be protected in perpetuity
allowing for appropriate recreation.
· El Sobrante Landfill HCP (Riverside
County, CA)
$5,180,000. This grant will support the purchase of
habitat within the Alberhill area. The acquisition of
properties in Alberhill area is anticipated to benefit wildlife
populations by conserving occupied habitat in large, interconnected
blocks. In addition to providing core habitat areas for the
Western Riverside MSHCP, both of these areas support a suite of Federal
and State listed species covered under the MSHCP. These
species include the threatened coastal California
gnatcatcher, the endangered least Bell’s
vireo and Stephen’s kangaroo rat. The plant communities found
in the area such as Riversidean sage scrub and riparian habitat are representative of the region's
original, native habitats. The Alberhill area has one of
the densest populations of the coastal California gnatcatcher
in the western Riverside County.
The public benefits of maintaining these areas as open space
include the use for various recreational purposes such as
hiking, mountain biking and other appropriate activities.
· Fieldstone NCCP/HCP (San
Diego County, CA)
$1,512,900. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is awarding a grant to acquire the Batiquitos
Bluffs parcel. The tract is central to a large expanse
of wildlife habitat that includes the Batiquitos Lagoon and
habitat to be preserved in the Multiple Habitat Conservation
Program (MHCP) to the north, and the only contiguous corridor
between the lagoon and habitat conserved through the Fieldstone Habitat
Conservation Plan to the south and east. The property is
within the proposed MHCP preserve. It supports the
federally threatened gnatcatcher and is within its designated
critical habitat. A variety of native vegetation
communities occur on the parcel including coastal sage scrub,
wetlands, and one of the largest remaining expanses of southern maritime
chaparral, which is a rare and declining vegetation type, that likely
supports the federally listed Del Mar manzanita and Encinitas baccharis
and possibly the federally listed Orcutt’s spineflower.
· Orange
County Central/Coastal
NCCP/HCP (Orange County, CA)
$3,000,000.
This grant will support the acquisition of
Saddle Creek. The acquisition of Saddle Creek will
reduce habitat fragmentation and provide critical habitat and
a movement corridor for the threatened coastal California gnatcatcher,
large mammals and other wildlife within this region of Orange County.
Saddle Creek straddles the Central/Coastal and Southern Subregion NCCP/HCP
and is significant as the only existing low-elevation wildlife connection
between the Subregions of Orange County. The property is designted
as critical habitat for the coastal California
gnatcatcher. In addition to the coastal California
gnatcatcher, about 17 other listed or sensitive species occur
or potentially occur within this area. Conservation of these
parcels will ensure that the rural character of the area is
maintained which will benefit adjacent residents.
Montana
· Plum Creek
HCP Land
Acquisition (Lewis & Clark County,
MT) $3,610,800.
This grant will help protect 1,003 acres of habitat that
could otherwise be subject to logging and development.
The project is part of a larger, community-based conservation
effort to eventually conserve 88,712 acres of former Plum
Creek Timber Company lands. The grant will be matched by donation
of a conservation easement on 435
acres of nearby important habitat. The projects would
protect bull trout, grizzly bear, and one of the last
remaining populations of genetically pure westslope cutthroat trout.
North Carolina
· North Carolina
Sandhills, Red Cockaded Woodpecker (Scotland
County, NC)
$1,901,250. The objective of this project is to acquire and
manage land that will contribute to the recovery of the North
Carolina Sandhills West population of the federally-endangered
red-cockaded woodpecker. Acquisition of the Rich Tract will
provide protection of a critical corridor between two disjunct
blocks of the North Carolina Gamelands, and acquisition of the
Carrington Tract will add 725 contiguous acres to Block F of
the Gamelands, protecting foraging habitat currently used by red-cockaded
woodpeckers on Block F. Purchase of these two tracts will help
ensure that encroachment of incompatible development around these blocks
does not adversely affect the State’s ability to manage its lands for
the benefit of both listed and unlisted species. Further, this
action will enable the State to increase the intensity of
restoration and management of the longleaf pine habitat in
this area, particularly with the use of prescribed fire.
The project will contribute substantially to fulfilling the
recovery strategies developed for the Sandhills population of
the red-cockaded woodpecker. Recovery of this population is a
high priority for the North Carolina Sandhills Conservation
Partnership, which is composed of six parties including the
United States Army.
Texas
· Balcones Canyonlands Preserve (Travis
County, TX)
$3,375,000. Grant funds will be used for the acquisition
of new preserve tracts vital for the ecological viability of
the Balcones Canyonlands Preserve. This preserve was
designed to encompass high quality habitat for the golden-cheeked
warbler, black-capped vireo, and the entire known range of three
endangered karst invertebrates.
· Bone Cave
Harvestman Preserve (Williamson County, TX) $1,353,750.
Acquisition and conservation of this 40-acre tract by the
Williamson County Conservation Foundation will add to the
long-term success of the Brushy Creek MUD Preserve as well as
augment the conservation measures pursuant to the Sultan &
Kahn HCP, and will contribute to the eventual recovery of the Bone
Cave harvestman.
The tract contains nine caves; the endangered Bone
Cave harvestman species
has been confirmed in six of the caves.
· Storm Ranch, Texas
Conservation Easement (Hays County,
TX) $1,766,004.
This project partners the Hill Country Conservancy with the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Texas Parks & Wildlife
Department to conserve the 5,685-acre Storm Ranch, which is
located within the contributing zone of the Edwards Aquifer in
Hays County, Texas.
A conservation easement will be purchased to protect the
quality of water recharging the aquifer and the springflow
discharging into habitat for the endangered Barton Springs salamander
at Barton Springs. This project was initiated in 2003 through the
Cooperative Endangered Species Conservation Fund program.
Utah
· Utah
Division of Wildlife Resources, Mojave desert tortoise (Washington
County, UT)
$4,422,459. This grant will be used to acquire parcels of
Mojave desert tortoise habitat key to the
viability of a reserve created under the Washington County
HCP. The reserve is vital to the long term survival and
recovery of the desert tortoise and will benefit a suite of
other species, including six federally listed species (the
bald eagle, southwestern willow flycatcher, Virgin River chub, woundfin,
dwarf bear poppy, and Silar pincushion cactus), one proposed endangered
plant (Shivwits milkvetch), and at least two dozen BLM species of
concern and State of Utah sensitive species. Purchase of the
parcels proposed for acquisition will significantly reduce
habitat fragmentation in the reserve.
Washington
· Cedar River Watershed
HCP (King County, WA)
$1,000,000. The land acquisition will result in securing
the best of the remaining habitats in the lower third of the
Cedar River Watershed, as the upper two-thirds of the
watershed is already protected under the City of Seattle’s
HCP. Acquisition will extend habitats for both listed and
unlisted species, improve connectivity particularly along the
riparian corridor, and protect habitats under immediate threat
of development.
· Tieton River Project, Cugini High Cascade
Timberlands, Hoh River
Conservation Corridor (Yakima,
King, and Jefferson Counties, WA)
$10,050,710 (total for three projects). The grant will
be used to acquire lands on approximately 3,000 acres of fish
and wildlife habitat in both eastern and western Washington
State.
Conservation benefits will be secured by the purchase of
old-growth timber occupied by northern spotted owls and
marbled murrelets in the west, and the protection of rare pine forests
and diverse canyon habitats in the east. The Tieton River
Project is awarded $631,350 to protect 640 acres of mature
ponderosa pine, Douglas fir and riparian habitats in the Tieton
River Canyon
(Yakima County).
The Cugini High Cascade Timberlands project is awarded
$5,716,143 to acquire approximately 560 acres of old growth
forest in the northern Washington Cascade mountains (King
County). The Hoh
River Conservation Corridor
project is awarded $3,703,217 to conserve approximately 1,755
acres of Hoh River
lands between the interior and coastal portions of Olympic National Park
(Jefferson County).
· Yakima River Wildlife
Corridor Phase III, Washington
State (Kittitas County,
WA) $1,763,795. The
funding will allow The Cascades Conservation Partnership to
complete the third and final phase of acquisition of the Yakima
River Wildlife Corridor. The corridor connects essential
wildlife habitat across Interstate 90 through a low elevation
passage in one of the narrowest sections of the Central
Cascades. This conservation project provides habitat and
a travel route for five federally listed land species, and
protects bull trout and steelhead habitat in and along the Yakima
River.
Habitat Conservation Planning Assistance Grants by State:
California
· East Contra Costa County
HCP (Contra
Costa County, CA)
$358,000.
The endangered San Joaquin
fox, the threatened California
red-legged frog and many other declining species, are found in
this area and their ability to persist in this rapidly
developing area depends upon the protection of large blocks of
contiguous habitat. This is an opportunity to plan urban development
in such a manner that will provide habitat for sensitive species
and open space for residents. In addition, the HCP/Natural Community
Conservation Plan (NCCP) will allow Contra Costa Water District to
utilize its full contractual allotment of federal water (Bureau of Reclamation)
from the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta by addressing the indirect
effects resulting from water deliveries.
· Mendocino Redwood Company HCP/NCCP (Mendocino
and Sonoma Counties) $258,000. Funds
are being awarded to finalize the development of a combined
federal Habitat Conservation Plan (HCP) and a California
state Natural Community Conservation Plan (NCCP) covering
approximately 232,000 acres of the Mendocino Redwood Company’s
forest lands in Mendocino and Sonoma
Counties, California.
This HCP/NCCP will benefit more than 11 species, including 19
federal listed species including the marbled murrelet and
northern spotted owl, several California
state listed species, and numerous species of conservation
concern.
· Placer
County Phase 2 Area
HCP/NCCP (Placer County, CA)
$349,000. In partnership with other local agencies and state
government, Placer County’s
open space and agricultural conservation effort known as Placer Legacy
is currently developing a comprehensive, multi-species HCP and NCCP that
will address listed and non-listed species, including Lahontan cutthroat
trout and the mountain yellow-legged frog. The plan is to be developed
in three phases. This 2004 grant will allow Placer County to begin
developing an Adaptive Management/Monitoring program through the purchase
of the HabiTrak system, development of the Phase 2 Land Cover and Habitat
Inventory, allow for the funding of the Phase 2 Science Advisors for
two years, and allow for half-time participation of a Department of Fish
and Game environmental scientist. These project tasks are fundamental
to further implementing a successful Phase 1 and initiating Phase
2 of the HCP/NCCP. The Phase 2 area, particularly the Martis Valley,
is currently experiencing intense development pressure, which makes
the timing of this project crucial to the preparation of the HCP/NCCP.
· San Bruno
Mountain HCP
Reassessment Project (San Mateo County,
CA)
$118,560. The project is for an amendment to the existing
HCP. At a minimum, the proposed HCP amendment will
consider: (1) the extent that non-native species
invasion on San Bruno Mountain is affecting the callippe
silverspot, mission blue, and San Bruno elfin butterflies on San Bruno
Mountain in a manner not previously considered; (2) whether management
and restoration of conserved habitat on San Bruno Mountain is not
occurring consistent with the San Bruno Mountain HCP; (3) the
extent callippe silverspot and designated bay checkerspot
critical habitat will be affected by full implementation of
the HCP’s incidental take permit; (4) the adequacy of the
HCP’s funding; and (5) the adequacy of the HCP’s avoidance and
minimization measures.
· Santa Clara
County HCP/NCCP (Santa
Clara County, CA)
$300,000. Santa Clara
County has initiated a
county-wide HCP/NCCP program which proposes to cover most of
the 841,000-acre county. The project is being undertaken in
partnership with the City of San Jose,
Santa Clara Valley Transportation Agency, and the Santa Clara
Valley Water District, with potential involvement from other
cities in the southern portion of the county. Santa
Clara County
has experienced enormous amounts of population growth over the
past 50 years and is continuing to experience growth pressures
which pose a threat to more than 100 endangered, threatened, and other
rare species. This HCP/NCCP will provide a comprehensive
approach to conservation and management of multiple species
countywide, including preservation of much of the remaining
habitat for several federally listed species, establishment of
habitat preserves, habitat restoration, and streamlined
regulatory permitting processes.
· South Sacramento
HCP (Sacramento County, CA)
$308,000. The grant will help local officials in South
Sacramento continue the planning phase of a regional
HCP. This HCP is expected to cover 45 species, including
seven federally threatened and endangered species, within a
planning area of approximately 490 square miles. This
HCP proposes to cover two species of Orcutt grass that are
restricted to Sacramento County
or for which this is the southernmost extent of its
range. The development community is actively involved in
this HCP because of their desire to streamline the regulatory
process in an area that has intense development pressure. Environmental
groups are also actively involved due to the wide variety of biological
resources in the planning area and because this is an opportunity
to preserve large, contiguous areas of habitat on a landscape level.
· Western
Stanislaus County
HCP/NCCP (Stanislaus County, CA)
$285,000.
The grant, combined with local funding, will enable local
officials to initiate an HCP/NCCP process to develop a
regional plan for 388,000 acres in western Stanislaus
County.
Currently, the Interstate 5 corridor and the cities of
Patterson and Newman are experiencing significant growth. Adequate
and appropriate resolutions to endangered species issues are key to successful implementation of
economic development and public works projects in these
areas. Central to the plan will be a conservation strategy
developed by the County, California Department of Fish and Game, and
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for the San Joaquin
kit fox. The conservation strategy, currently in draft
form but yet to be implemented, will identify and protect a
regional movement corridor for the kit fox. Ecologically
valuable grassland, riparian woodland, and foothill habitats will
also be conserved within the corridor, providing for other covered species
and maintaining connectivity and ecosystem function in several watersheds.
Stanislaus County
will partner with other local agencies, as well as federal and
state agencies, to develop this HCP/NCCP.
· Yuba and Sutter Counties HCP/NCCP (Yuba and Sutter
Counties, CA) $178,000.
The grant will help local officials in portions of Yuba and Sutter
Counties initiate the planning phase of a regional HCP/NCCP.
Since many land use plans within the HCP/NCCP planning area
are still being developed by the local jurisdictions, there
are significant opportunities to provide for natural resource
conservation at this time. There is an opportunity,
through this HCP/NCCP effort to promote the development of a comprehensive,
multi-species conservation plan that will address both listed
and non-listed species including: California
tiger salamander, Swainson’s hawk, giant garter snake,
steelhead, and tricolored blackbird. The Counties will partner
with other local agencies, as well as federal and state
agencies, to develop this HCP/NCCP.
Colorado
· San Luis
Valley Regional Habitat Conservation
Plan (Alamosa, Conejos, Mineral, Rio
Grande, and Saguache
Counties, CO)
$384,000. The grant will fund the development of a
regional approach to southwestern willow flycatcher
conservation planning in the San Luis
Valley. The HCP will cover
approximately two million acres and 150 stream miles. The
project has widespread support from numerous State, local, and
Federal agencies as well as non-governmental
organizations. The project lies within the Rio Grande
Recovery Unit, one of six recovery units for the southwestern willow
flycatcher. The San Luis
Valley is one of four management
units within the recovery unit, and provides the best
potential in Colorado
for supporting recovery of the flycatcher. In addition
to the flycatcher, the HCP will cover the bald eagle and the
yellow-billed cuckoo.
Commonwealth of Northern
Mariana Islands
· Rota Island-wide Habitat Conservation Plan (Rota,
CNMI) $339,522. To develop an island-wide
habitat conservation plan (HCP) that addresses economic
development and endangered species conflicts on the island
of Rota. The
HCP will protect and conserve existing secondary limestone forests
for the benefit of the endangered Mariana crow, and other suitable habitats
required by other species that may be impacted by development on similar
habitats elsewhere on Rota.
Finalization of this HCP will complete the early planning
efforts for the Rota island-wide HCP begun
in the mid-1990s.
Georgia
· Development of an HCP for Imperiled Aquatic
Species of the Etowah River Basin Bartow, Cherokee, Cobb,
Dawson, Forsyth, Fulton, Lumpkin, Paulding, and Pickens
Counties, Georgia) $392,608. The proposed project will
complete the planning process for the comprehensive Habitat Conservation
Plan for the Etowah River
Basin in Georgia,
ultimately resulting in an incidental take permit. The
overall goal of the HCP effort is for each local government to
implement growth management and local preservation efforts
that ensure the future conservation of aquatic imperiled
species in this basin. The incidental take permit will
provide county and municipal governments (regulatory agencies)
the authority to authorize projects that provide for the
conservation of numerous aquatic species in the Etowah
Basin while allowing
environmentally-acceptable development to proceed. This
is the fourth and final stage of planning for this HCP.
Specific objectives for this year include: Working with the 20
local governments to implement ordinances and policies that
minimize the impact of development on aquatic biota; Working
with local governments to revise comprehensive plans to reduce
development pressures in sensitive areas; Assisting local
governments in putting policies in place for acquisition and
protection of sensitive watersheds; Establishing a coordinating
body for monitoring, enforcing and funding the implementation of
the Etowah HCP; Conducting scientific and economic analyses for supporting
the adaptive management aspect of the HCP; Crafting the Environmental
Assessment for the Etowah HCP; Completing a draft of the HCP,
the incidental take permit and the adaptive management plan; and holding
meetings with stakeholder groups and the public and working with the
media to facilitate better understanding of HCP
implementation.
Maryland
· HCP Development for the Delmarva fox squirrel
and Timber Harvesting on Maryland’s Eastern Shore (Caroline,
Dorchester, Kent, Queen Anne’s, Talbot, Somerset, Wicomico,
and Worcester Counties, Maryland) $128,625.The grant will help
support the conservation of the Delmarva fox squirrel in 90
percent of the species' range. In partnership with the timber industry,
the objectives include assessing the impacts of timber harvesting
on the Eastern Shore of Maryland to the Delmarva fox squirrel,
development of conservation strategies for minimizing and mitigating
such impacts at a landscape level, and drafting an HCP for
timber harvesting on both private and State lands on the
Eastern Shore of Maryland. In addition, using light
detection and ranging technology, establish a baseline
estimate of the acreage of suitable Delmarva fox squirrel habitat on
the Eastern Shore.
Montana
· Montana
DNRC Forested Trust Lands HCP (Montana)
$589,500. The grant will allow the State of Montana
to complete the development of the HCP and associated
Environmental Impact Statement for 1,206,102 acres of lands owned
by the Department of Natural Resources and Conservation. These lands
provide important habitat and fulfill key life requirements for
many listed and sensitive species, including gray wolf,
grizzly bear, Canada lynx,
bald eagle, and bull trout.
Nevada
· Southern Nye County
Multiple Species
Habitat Conservation Plan (Nye County,
NV) $175,000. Nye
County, Nevada,
will initiate the development of a MSHCP within the Mojave
Desert portion of southern Nye
County.
This portion of the county lies within the range of the desert
tortoise ( Gopherus agassizii), a
species listed as threatened under the Endangered Species
Act. To provide conservation for the tortoise and five
additional species of concern while allowing economic growth
and urban development plans to move forward, Nye
County will develop a
draft MSHCP and related Environmental Impact Statement and
Implementing Agreement within one year of the grant
award. The MSHCP will include conservation actions for six federally-listed
and sensitive species that occur within the planning area.
These species occur in Mojave Desert scrub,
mesquite woodland, and desert riparian habitats.
Development of the MSHCP will complement the existing Clark
County MSHCP and the draft Southeastern Lincoln County MSHCP
currently under development. Once the Lincoln and Nye County
MSHCPs are complete, almost all of the desert tortoise habitat
that occurs in Nevada
will be included under habitat conservation plans, with the exception
of tribal and military lands.
South Dakota
· South
Dakota Statewide HCP (South
Dakota) $188,249. The grant will assist
the State of South Dakota
in gathering biological data that is essential in their
development of a statewide Habitat Conservation Plan. The
funds will also allow the State to begin developing the operating conservation
strategy for the HCP. Because of the large geographic scope of
the covered lands, the project has the potential to result in substantial
conservation benefits for the pallid sturgeon, least tern, piping
plover, and bald eagle.
Texas
· Williamson
County Regional Habitat
Conservation Plan (Williamson County,
TX) $1,005,000. Grant
funds will be used to finalize Williamson County’s
Habitat Conservation Planning effort, which was initiated in 2003.
Establishment of the Williamson County Regional HCP (RHCP) will aid in
the conservation and recovery of three endangered karst species,
the golden-cheeked warbler, black-capped vireo, and the Georgetown
salamander, a candidate for listing. The RHCP is
anticipated to include at least nine species as covered
species.
Washington
· Dungeness Comprehensive Irrigation District
Management Plan/HCP (Clallam County,
WA) $79,500. The HCP
covers the lower 11 miles of the Dungeness
River, addresses
long-term irrigation needs, and improves instream
habitat. The HCP will provide for the implementation of 24 specific
conservation measures with direct, measurable benefits for listed and
unlisted species as a result of addressing water quantity, fish passage,
and water quality issues.
· Family
Forest HCP (Lewis
County, WA) $469,150.
The HCP will cover over 100,000 acres of small family
forestlands managed by private landowners. The HCP will
provide an alternative to riparian harvest restrictions required
under state forest practices rules. Family forest landowners seek
this HCP as an incentive to keep family forests on the landscape.
· Foster Creek HCP (Douglas
County, WA)
$518,605. The HCP will cover over one million acres of
agricultural land in Douglas
County. The HCP will
provide a tool for agricultural landowners, operators, and managers to
meet their land management objectives while protecting and
enhancing shrub-steppe, riparian, and aquatic habitats for up
to 63 proposed covered species.
· Teanaway Conservation Plan (Kittitas
County, WA)
$312,700. The HCP will cover 55,800 acres of forest
lands owned and managed by American Forest Resources.
The HCP would result from an innovative pilot effort between
the landowner and the state to develop a Landowner Option Plan for northern
spotted owls, as a precursor to receiving a federal incidental take
permit.
· Washington DNR Aquatic Lands HCP (Statewide,
WA) $1,057,100. This HCP will cover over 2.4 million
acres of submerged land managed by Washington State’s Department
of Natural Resources in marine, estuarine, and freshwater
habitats. The HCP will ensure that covered activities promote sustainable
ecosystems, minimize cumulative impacts, and increase protection,
conservation, and recovery efforts for up to 75 proposed covered
species.
Multi-State
· Development of a Habitat Conservation Plan for
the Northern Cumberlands Region (Tennessee
and Kentucky)
$272,500. The project will result in the initiation of
planning for a comprehensive Habitat Conservation Plan for the
Northern Cumberlands Area, including the Tennessee
and Cumberland River watersheds,
that will lead ultimately to an incidental take
permit. The permit will allow the States of Tennessee and Kentucky,
working with partners, to implement conservation measures to minimize
and mitigate impacts to rare and imperiled species while allowing authorized
activities such as timber harvest and coal mining to occur. The HCP
will focus on both terrestrial and aquatic species. This area
is renowned for its biodiversity and supports many rare plant
communities and some of the best remaining habitats for a
number of endangered freshwater mussels. The HCP will
build upon The Nature Conservancy’s eco-regional planning
effort for the Northern Cumberlands.
The information from this effort will provide a strong
foundation from which to initiate the planning for the HCP.
Fifty-nine rare and imperiled species are documented for the
project area, and of these, 22 are listed as federally-endangered or
threatened. The Plan will focus on a minimum of 15 species
including 8 federally endangered freshwater mussels
(Cumberland elktoe, Cumberlandian combshell, Oyster mussel,
Tan riffleshell, Catspaw, Fine-rayed pigtoe, Alabama lamp
mussel, and Little-wing pearlymussel), endangered plants including
Purple bean and Cumberland sandwort as well as two bird species, the
Cerulean warbler and Golden-winged warbler. Initial
planning efforts include establishment of a Steering Committee
and an HCP Development Team; completion of a literature review
of land use impacts on the imperiled species for those species
where knowledge gaps exist; research on impacts of land
management activities on imperiled species; GIS analyses to define the
priority habitats for the HCP; and, development of an outreach
program to engage additional partners, landowners and
stakeholders in the HCP process.
Recovery Land Acquisition Grants by State:
Alaska
· Nelson Lagoon Steller’s Eider Habitat Project
(Nelson Lagoon, Alaska) $191,304.
Project partners will purchase strategic private inholdings from
willing sellers in the Nelson Lagoon area to protect Steller’s
eider habitat. Nelson Lagoon is the most important fall
molting area for the world’s population of Steller’s
eiders. Nelson Lagoon is located within the
state-designated Port Moller Critical Habitat Area. There are
several private inholdings in the Port Moller Critical Habitat
Area that, if developed, could threaten important Steller’s
eider staging, molting, and wintering habitat, as well as
hamper recovery of the listed Alaska-breeding population of
this species. Other species benefiting from this project will
include the emperor goose, Pacific brant, cackling Canada
goose, marbled godwit, bristle-thighed curlew, Hudsonian godwit, and
other more common species of ducks and shorebirds. This
project is part of a larger-scale project to integrate
waterfowl and wetland protection initiatives such as the North
American Wetlands Conservation Act, National Coastal Wetlands
Conservation Grant Program, and the Pacific Coast Joint
Venture.
Arizona
· Coal Mine Springs Acquisition Phase II (Santa
Cruz County, Arizona) $750,000.
The funding will purchase a 1900-acre tract of land in Coal Mine
Canyon, Santa
Cruz County, Arizona.
This is the second phase of a two-phase acquisition benefiting
the recovery of the Gila topminnow; the Phase I acquisition
was fully funded through this program in fiscal year 2003.
Acquisition of the property will further protect water quality for the
Coal Mine
Canyon population of
the Gila topminnow, one of the two largest naturally existing
populations. Protection of this population is of
paramount importance to the continued existence and recovery of the topminnow.
In addition, the property will provide foraging habitat for the
lesser long-nosed bat, riparian corridor for the Mexican spotted
owl, and augmentation to primary nesting habitat along Sonoita
Creek for the western yellow-billed cuckoo.
California
· Dirty Socks Spring (Inyo
County, California)
$92,500. This acquisition will protect property that
contains a natural spring, one-acre pond, outflow streams,
alkali wetlands, and salt grass marsh. Aquatic habitats
on the property will be used to establish new populations of Owens
tui chub and Owens pupfish, completing an activity identified in
the Owens Basin Wetland and Aquatic species Recovery Plan for
Inyo and Mono Counties, California.
· Gabbro soil plant habitat 2004 (El
Dorado County, California) $450,000.
This acquisition will purchase essential habitat of an extremely
rare natural community comprising approximately 10 percent of California’s
native plant species, including the six Gabbro plants. This grant
will add 227 acres to the existing Pine Hill Ecological Preserve.
· Morro
Bay shoreline (San
Luis Obispo County, California)
$500,000. This acquisition will conserve approximately 21
shoreline acres, connecting other State and privately owned
conservation areas. The wetland and dune habitats
provide habitat for several State and federally listed species
and other species of concern, including California sea-blite,
salt-marsh bird’s-beak, western snowy plover, marsh sandwort, and
Morro shoulderband snail.
· Peninsular bighorn sheep (Highway 74) (Riverside
County, California) $75,000.
Acquisition of these parcels will contribute to the conservation goals
outlined in the recovery plan for bighorn sheep in the Peninsular Ranges
by ensuring that this area remains intact, preventing further fragmentation.
· Ramona Grasslands (San
Diego County, California)
$500,000. This acquisition will protect intact and
undisturbed grassland in Santa Maria Valley,
benefiting Stephen’s kangaroo rat, arroyo toad, San
Diego fairy shrimp, and coastal California
gnatcatcher. The grasslands contain numerous vernal
pools and will link adjacent parcels into a contiguous preserve
of nearly 2,000 acres.
· Soledad
Canyon riparian
properties (Los Angeles County, California) $185,000.
This acquisition will help achieve recovery goals for Arroyo southwestern
toad, unarmored threespine stickleback, least Bell’s
vireo, southwestern willow flycatcher, and slenderhorned
spineflower by securing habitat and habitat connectivity within
the upper Santa Clara River watershed.
The Santa Clara River
is one of the last undammed wild rivers in southern California
and subject to natural hydrologic flow events which are
crucial for target species.
· Vernal pool species recovery, Millville Plains
(Shasta County, California)
$317,716. This grant will be used to purchase a conservation easement
on approximately 250 acres of land containing vernal pool complexes
within Millville Plains, benefiting vernal pool fairy shrimp and slender
Orcutt grass. This conservation easement is adjacent to approximately
600 acres of vernal pool habitat already protected.
Georgia
· Acquisition of the Patterson Tract on Holly
Creek (Murray
County, GA) $950,563.
Holly Creek
is a tributary to the Conasauga
River which is considered
globally significant to the conservation of freshwater diversity.
Approximately 80 native fish (including three federally listed fish)
and 40 native mussel species (nine federally listed mussels) occur in
the watershed. Although no federally listed species have yet
been
documented in the project area, the federally listed
endangered blue shiner, southern pigtoe, coosa moccasinshell,
and the federally listed threatened fine-lined pocketbook and Alabama
moccasinshell are known to occur in the creeks adjacent to the
property. The purchase of this tract will contribute to
a larger effort to enhance water quality and protection of the
Conasauga River
watershed by securing land which includes important
riparian buffers in the headwaters and by enhancing water
quality by guarding against increased siltation.
Hawaii
· Manana
Valley watershed
protection & habitat restoration project (Honolulu
County, Hawaii)
$900,000. This acquisition and restoration is a multi-species
conservation effort that includes critical habitat for 15 listed
plants and Oahu elepaio as well as essential
habitat for the Oahu tree snail.
This parcel contains five distinct forest types including wet and
mesic forest types and four miles of stream. This parcel is
also adjacent to a State forest reserve.
Idaho
· Moen Ranch property – Pahsimeroi
River. The grant award
to Idaho Department of Fish and Game (IDFG) will help purchase
approximately 208 acres of riparian lands along the Pahsimeroi
River that runs through
the Moen Ranch. This acquisition would protect habitat
critical to listed bull trout, salmon, and steelhead.
This purchase will be accomplished through a collaborative
partnership with the State of Idaho Office of Species
Conservation, The Nature Conservancy (TNC), the Soil and Water Conservation
District and IDFG. The collaborative effort coincides with the
property owner's desire to avoid subdivision, and to continue agricultural
production along with habitat conservation. Therefore TNC will
purchase the entire property and sell the riparian section to IDFG for
perpetual conservation management, along with undertaking other transactions
to protect habitat while keeping cultivate dareasin production.
The Pahsimeroi River
is one of three key tributaries to the Upper Salmon
River subbasin which provides more anadromous fish
spawning areas (redds) than any other subbasin in the Columbia
River Basin. The subbasin
produces 39% of the spring chinook salmon, 45% of the summer chinook
salmon and 25% of the summer steelhead returning to the mouth of the
Columbia River. In 2002 the Moen Ranch
accounted for 63 of the total 125 chinook redds on the Pahsimeroi
River.
Iowa
· Land acquisition for eastern prairie fringed
orchid protection (Jones and Jackson
Counties, Iowa)
$254,625. This grant will be used to acquire approximately
180 acres of wet to mesic tallgrass prairie through fee-simple
acquisition, which will facilitate management for the benefit of
over 2,500 eastern prairie fringed orchid plants. This
project will advance the objectives of the recovery plan by
protecting sites in private ownership, enhancing the
protection of known populations, and acquiring a potential
reintroduction and expansion area. Acquisition of the site
will protect and enhance the viability of these populations,
ensure that the minimum recovery goals are met,
and help move the species toward possible de-listing.
Maine
· Machias
River Project, Phase II
(Hancock and Washington Counties, Maine)
$500,000. The Service’s contribution toward the Phase II project will
help protect over 47 miles of lakeshore and over 13 miles of stream frontage.
Some of the special features of the Phase II project that will benefit
include: Atlantic salmon rearing and spawning habitat along
Fifth Machias Stream, the primary water source for downstream
Atlantic salmon habitat along the main stem of the Machias
River; and multiple
bald eagle nesting sites on Third
Machias Lake.
The Machias River
is one of the eight river systems in Maine
that are included in the Atlantic salmon Gulf of
Maine distinct
population segment. Preserving the Machias
River system may
help improve the status of the Atlantic salmon.
Maryland
· Delmarva fox squirrel habitat protection in the
Nanticoke River Watershed (Maryland
– statewide) $267,183. Project partners will acquire a
permanent conservation easement in the Nanticoke Watershed, Maryland. The
property, referred to as the Mowbray Tract, totals 708 acres, and
the entire property will be under the easement. Protection of
this parcel of Delmarva fox squirrel habitat requires little
or no management and will expand upon an adjacent permanently
protected area of land totaling over 3,000 acres. The
easement will eliminate all but one development right and
require a Department of Natural Resources approved Forest
Stewardship Plan that addresses habitat requirements of the
squirrel along with migratory songbirds and other sensitive
species that utilize the forested block. The owner is
also willing to explore reforestation of certain areas of the
property as squirrel habitat.
Michigan
· Mitchell’s satyr recovery land acquisition
(southwest Michigan) $416,189.
The grant will support acquisition of two parcels (53 acres) within
the Blue Creek Fen area, a 35 acre parcel in the Cook Lake/Rudy Road
Complex, and additional properties within the Mitchell’s satyr priority
area. In addition to the Mitchell's satyr, the Blue Creek Fen hosts
several state-listed or special concern species including eastern box
turtle, spotted turtle, and white lady-slipper. The site has
also been identified as likely habitat for the =[ Eastern massasauga rattlesnake, a
candidate for Federal protection. Blue Creek Fen exhibits high
species diversity, has strong natural community integrity, and is supported
by relatively intact hydrological processes. The largest landowner,
the Michigan Department of Transportation, has been working with
The Nature Conservancy and the Service to develop and implement a management
plan to achieve long-term protection and management for the Mitchell’s
satyr butterfly on the publicly owned portions of the fen since the
mid 1990s. The acquisition of this tract will increase
managed habitat to nearly one mile along Blue Creek. The
Michigan Department of Natural Resources will partner with the
Southwest Michigan Land Trust to acquire approximately 35
acres in the Cook Lake/Rudy Road Complex, adding to the amount
of permanently protected land in the complex. In 2001, the Land
Trust leveraged private funds from donors and members to acquire
the 12-acre Cook Lake Fen Preserve which protects high quality
prairie fen occupied by the Mitchell’s satyr.
Nebraska
· Eastern Nebraska saline
wetland land acquisition (Lancaster County, Nebraska)
$160,000. These funds will help acquire and restore 31 acres
of eastern saline wetland habitat, a habitat type that has
experienced major losses (approximately 80 percent) in Nebraska
and is considered critically imperiled. Without the
project, the property would likely be bought for development,
resulting in a loss of the habitat benefits of the property to
least terns, piping plovers, and the Salt Creek tiger beetle, and compromising
the habitat benefits of nearby protected saline wetlands by the
indirect and direct effects of urban development. The
property is the highest priority acquisition for the Salt
Creek tiger beetle, a declining, narrowly distributed species
awaiting listing. The property will be managed in
perpetuity for endangered species and other wildlife benefits.
Nevada
· Dave’s Island tract (Elko
County, Nevada)
$1,000,000. This acquisition will benefit the Jarbidge
River Distinct Population Segment of bull trout. The
draft recovery plan identified acquisition as the most important
recovery action for the Dave
Creek population.
This acquisition will also benefit sage grouse and redband
trout and eliminate grazing impacts.
New Mexico
· Blue Hole Cienega, Santa
Rosa, New Mexico:
core conservation habitat for Pecos
sunflower (Guadalupe, New
Mexico) $107,000. This acquisition will
protect 130 acres of high quality habitat within the Town of Santa Rosa
for the threatened Pecos sunflower. Pecos
sunflower is a wetland plant confined to spring and cienega
(desert wetland) areas in New Mexico and
west Texas. The
acquisition will protect one of the known Pecos sunflower
core conservation areas, and will fulfill a criterion of the
draft recovery plan.
North Carolina
· Pettiford Creek, Ahearn
Tract Land
Acquisition (Carteret County, North Carolina)
$270,000. The Ahearn Tract (adjacent to recently purchased conservation
areas and near Croatan National
Forest) is under immediate threat
of development. The purchase of this property will complete protection
of a 900 acre area bounded on three sides by Croatan
National Forest
and 2.4 miles of frontage along Pettiford Creek. The purchase
will benefit red-cockaded woodpeckers directly by protecting
foraging habitat and active clusters on the tract and
indirectly through its use as a buffer to existing populations
on Croatan National
Forest. Biologists believe
the site has a high probability of supporting rough-leaved loosestrife,
which could benefit from protection and management (such as prescribed
burning) on-site. The property also supports a number of rare and
candidate species including Bachman’s sparrow, Carolina
goldenrod, Venus flytrap, and southern hognose snake.
Ohio
· Conservation easement acquisition along
Pymatuning Creek for clubshell mussel recovery (northeast Ohio)
$72,575. The objective of this initiative is to continue
to secure permanent conservation easements from willing
landowners along the main stem of Pymatuning Creek to aid in recovery
efforts for the clubshell mussel. The easements will help complement
the land acquisition efforts by the state and local agencies and
other organizations. Conditions of the conservation easements
will assure the permanent protection of the riparian corridor
and create significant buffers from potentially adverse land
uses on adjoining properties. There are three landowners
identified to protect approximately 120 acres to benefit 5,000
feet of riparian habitat.
Oklahoma
· Recovery of the Ozark big-eared bat and three
other federally listed karst-dependent species (Adair
County, Oklahoma)
$469,083. Purchase of up to 1,274 acres in Adair
County, Oklahoma,
by the Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation, will
benefit the Ozark big-eared bat and the gray bat. The
tract of land contains a portion of the largest known cave in Oklahoma,
which provides important maternity roost and hibernacula habitat for
the bats. The property is adjacent to the Ozark Plateau
National Wildlife Refuge. The Arkansas Natural Resources
Department is cooperating in the effort to conserve listed
species within the Ozark Karst Ecosystem of the Ozark
Highlands Ecoregion, which occurs in Arkansas,
Missouri, and Oklahoma.
Oregon
· Elk River Spit
conservation easement for snowy plover (Curry
County, Oregon)
$307,000. This grant will acquire a conservation easement for
up to 80 acres of beach foredune behind the mean high tide
line at the Elk River Spit in Oregon.
The purpose of the project is to manage the land for the
federally threatened western snowy plover and the State listed pink
sand-verbena and migrating shorebirds. The recovery plan for
the plover identified the Elk River Spit as one of 19 areas in
Oregon important
to the western snowy plover's future recovery. The spit’s landowners
are cooperating in the project by donating 25% of the value of the
conservation easement.
· Jacksonville Woods Fritillaria gentneri
(Jackson County, Oregon) $358,000. The acquisition will
benefit a very narrowly distributed plant found in oak -
madrone habitat. This species only occurs in two counties in
Oregon. Upwards
of 1,000 individuals occur on the two parcels addressed in the
proposal.
South Carolina
· Bonneau Ferry Tract (Berkeley
County, South Carolina)
$1,646,671. The property is part of a larger three-phase
project located along the Cooper River.
The Cooper River
is the primary freshwater migration route for manatees in South
Carolina. The Cooper
River also supports
habitat for the endangered shortnose sturgeon. These
species will benefit directly by protection of water quality
in the river. Habitat for the shortnose sturgeon may be
included in the purchase. Additionally, the larger property
and adjacent properties already under protection support bald eagle,
foraging and roosting sites for wood stork, and a number of other rare
species (including swallow-tailed kite). The purchase of this
tract will contribute to the overall acquisition of 10.5 miles
of river frontage along Cooper
River.
Tennessee
· Bellamy
Cave Purchase (Montgomery
County, Tennessee)
$65,500. Bellamy Cave
is identified in the Gray Bat Recovery Plan as a priority one site for
this species. This cave provides both winter and summer
habitat for gray bats with a colony of approximately 91,000
bats in winter and a maternity colony of 35,000 bats in
summer. Gray bats are sensitive to human disturbance and
the size of this colony makes this cave a high priority.
The State will purchase this property to ensure protection and long-term
management for this species and others such as the small-footed bat,
southern cavefish, and, potentially, Indiana
bat.
· Land Acquisition of the Lane Farm in Middle Tennessee
(Wilson County, Tennessee)
$285,750. Acquisition of this property will provide
protection for one of the five existing populations of Tennessee
coneflower and permit active management and enhancement of a
population of leafy prairie-clover. Additionally, the
property supports limestone cedar
glades, an extremely rare community which provides habitat
for many narrowly distributed
plant species, including seven state listed plants. The
property also contains a small mixed grass barren. In the state of Tennessee,
nearly all such barrens have been lost to conversion for agricultural
and commercial or residential development.
Texas
· Land acquisition of endangered and threatened
wildlife habitat, specifically for golden-cheeked warbler,
near Cedar Hill
State Park (Dogwood
Canyon) (Dallas
County, Texas)
$286,500. The acquisition of a 24-acre tract of land
will provide high quality breeding habitat for the golden-cheeked
warbler in Dogwood Canyon.
Dogwood Canyon
may be the only location in Dallas
County currently
inhabited by the warbler, although this species was present in
the county historically. The acquisition is part of a
larger project to protect 250 acres of Dogwood
Canyon for the benefit
of the warbler and the black-capped vireo, and other wildlife species.
Utah
· State of Utah Virgin
River Confluence acquisition (Washington
County, Utah)
$615,000. The funds will be used to purchase 56 acres of
riparian habitat at the Virgin River Confluence essential for
the protection of threatened and endangered species, including
woundfin, Virgin River chub, southwestern willow flycatcher,
desert tortoise, and bald eagle. The proposed parcel
represents pristine habitat where the Mojave Desert
meets the Great Basin and Colorado
Plateau, and provides habitat for dozens of species unique to
the State of Utah.
This project represents Phase III of a project that will
eventually protect a 530-acre ecosystem complex of riparian
habitats along 3.5 miles of the Virgin River.
To date, the State and its partners have permanently protected
275 acres of this total.
Virginia
· Purchase of Mitchell’s satyr habitat in Virginia
(Floyd County, Virginia)
$183,974. This project will provide permanent protection for one
of the largest concentrations of the federally endangered
Mitchell’s satyr butterfly in Virginia.
The wetlands on the subject property also support the state
endangered bog turtle. A key parcel at Camp Branch Wetlands
will be protected through purchase of a conservation easement and the
property will be dedicated by the Department of Conservation and Recreation
(DCR) as a state natural area preserve. Natural area stewardship
of the DCR Natural Heritage Program will manage the property to
ensure the continued viability of the two rare species and their habitats.
When Mitchell’s satyr was federally listed, it was not known from
the State of Virginia.
The species was discovered in Virginia
in 1998, one year after the recovery plan was finalized.
All known sites of Mitchell’s satyr in Virginia
occur within a 50 square mile area of the New River
watershed.
Washington
· Golden paintbrush recovery at Ebey’s Reserve (Island
County, Washington)
$187,300. This acquisition proposal is a single species project
that benefits a narrowly distributed plant species. It is
vital for species recovery because it is one of only 11
remaining sites and one of the three largest sites on which
this plant is found. Acquisition will make a major contribution
toward recovery.
Multi-State
· An ecoregion approach to recovery of the Ozark
big-eared bat and three other federally listed karst dependent
species: Phase I (Benton,
Marion, Newton
and Washington Counties, Arkansas,
also includes lands in Oklahoma) $584,237.
The funds will purchase tracts in both Oklahoma
and Arkansas adjacent
to several protected areas that provide foraging habitat or habitat
adjacent to foraging habitat for Ozark big-eared bat, gray bat, Indiana
bat, and Ozark cavefish. The project will result in the protection
of entire cave systems and their watersheds in the Ozark Karst Ecosystem.
Acquisition of land adjacent to the Ozark Plateau National Wildlife
Refuge (Oklahoma)
will support recovery task 1 in the Ozark big-eared bat
Recovery Plan. Acquisition of land near to Slippery
Hollow and Garrett Hollow Natural Areas will provide
protection of essential surface foraging habitat and movement
corridors for the same species. Acquisition of land near to
Cave Springs Natural Area will help better protect the
recharge zone of a cave which supports over half the world’s population
of Ozark cavefish. This property also provides habitat for gray
bats. Lands purchased near Edgeman
Cave will protect Indiana
bat hibernacula.
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