OFFICE OF THE
SECRETARY
Contact:Patricia Fisher,
202-208-5634
For Immediate
Release: July 11, 2003
Don Morgan,
703-358-2061
Secretary Norton
Announces 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
29 states 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 endangered red-cockaded
woodpecker in the Southeast to the threatened spectacled eider in Alaska.
Funded through the Cooperative Endangered Species Conservation Fund and
authorized by Section 6 of the U.S. Endangered Species Act, the grants
will enable States, working in partnership with private landowners,
conservation groups and other agencies and organizations to initiate
conservation planning efforts, and to acquire and protect habitat to
support the conservation of threatened and endangered species.
"Today's grant awards
recognize the important work that States and their partners are doing to
conserve and recover threatened and endangered species," Norton said.
"Grants are an important tool in our efforts to empower local governments
and citizens as they seek to develop voluntary conservation partnerships
that provide real benefits to listed species."
The Section 6 grant programs
include the $6.6 million Habitat Conservation Planning Assistance Grants
Program, the $51.1 million Habitat Conservation Plan Land Acquisition
Grants Program, and the $12.7 million 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.
" As someone who has worked
for decades at the State and local level on behalf of wildlife
conservation, I know these grants really help," said Fish and Wildlife
Service director Steve Williams. "They provide not only a financial boost
to grantees but also encouragement by supporting on-the-ground efforts."
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 (HCPs). 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 330 Habitat Conservation
Plans currently in effect covering approximately 30 million acres, and
some 320 more are being developed.
In Riverside County,
California, a $6.25 million grant will enable the State and its partners
to acquire and protect important interconnected habitat to support the
Western Riverside Multiple Species Habitat Conservation Plan (MSHCP). This
HCP will cover more than 100 Federal and State listed species, including
the threatened coastal California gnatcatcher, 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 original, native habitats of the region. Preserving these areas as
open space will also enable them to be used for outdoor recreational
activities such as hiking and mountain biking.
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.
In northern Idaho, a $563,000
HCP Planning Assitance Grant will help the Idaho Department of Lands (IDL)
work with the Service and other stakeholders to develop a Habitat
Conservation Plan to minimize any impacts of IDL activities to listed
species. The HCP will provide conservation benefits to listed threatened
and endangered species, including grizzly bear, bull trout, lynx, and the
critically endangered woodland caribou, while providing the State of Idaho
with assurances that important land management practices can continue.
Both Idaho and the species will benefit from this HCP. IDL will be able to
fulfill its mandate to maximize the long term return from these endowment
lands to the beneficiaries with certainty regarding compliance with the
Endangered Species Act, and the conservation of listed species will be
enhanced.
The Recovery Land Acquisition
Grants Program provides funds to states and territories for acquisition of
habitat for endangered and threatened species in support of 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.
For example, a grant of
nearly $1.7 million will enable the Tennessee Wildlife Resources Agency
and the Nature Conservancy to acquire portions of the Kyles Ford mussel
shoal along the Clinch River, an area believed to be among the most
biologically diverse endangered mussel habitats on Earth. The parcel that
will be acquired is home to 10 Federally endangered mussel species. By
acquiring property along the river corridor, instituting buffer strips,
stabilizing stream banks and preventing runoff and sedimentation, this
project will mark a significant step in efforts to permanently protect the
Clinch River, its habitats, and fauna, and to recover these rare mussel
species.
For more information on the
2003 grant awards for these programs see the Service's Endangered Species
home page at http://endangered.fws.gov/grants/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.
Habitat Conservation Plan
Land Acquisition Grants by State:
Arkansas:
·
Potlatch and Plum Creek (Union, Ashley, Drew, Bradley and Calhoun
Counties, Arkansas) - A $250,000 grant award will help acquire and
protect 1,680 acres of shortleaf-loblolly pine habitat adjacent
to acreage covered by two other Habitat Conservation Plans (HCPs), and
will contribute to the recovery of the federally listed endangered
red-cockaded woodpecker. The habitat will be managed to encourage growth
in the existing population of woodpeckers and in its range. In addition,
protection of habitat on this acreage will allow juvenile red-cockaded
woodpeckers to disperse from the conservation areas to the nearby Warren
Prairie Natural Area, where habitat management to attract red-cockaded
woodpeckers is planned for the next two years. The acquisitions compliment
the present conservation initiatives and requirements of the
HCPs.
California:
· Assessment
District AD 161 HCP (Riverside County, CA) - A $6,250,000 grant award will
enable the acquisition of properties in North Warm
Springs Creek, the Santa Margarita Watershed, and Ramsgate area of
Riverside County. The acquisition will benefit wildlife populations by
conserving habitat in large, interconnected blocks. In addition to
providing core habitat areas for the Western Riverside Multiple Species
Habitat Conservation Plan (MSHCP), both of these areas support more than
100 Federal and State listed species proposed to be covered under the
Plan. These species include the threatened coastal California gnatcatcher,
endangered least Bell's vireo and Stephen's kangaroo rat. The plant
communities found in the area, including 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 and mountain
biking.
· Colton Substation HCP (San
Bernardino and Riverside Counties, CA) - A $2,156,675 grant will
enable the acquisition and protection of portions of the
Colton Dune ecosystem, unique to this region of San Bernardino and
Riverside counties. Approximately two percent of the Colton Dune ecosystem
still exists. The acquisition will permanently conserve habitat occupied
by a suite of federally and State listed species endemic to the area,
including the federally endangered Delhi Sands flower-loving fly,
threatened coastal California gnatcatcher, Los Angeles pocket mouse, and
western burrowing owl. These lands are critical for the survival and
recovery of the Delhi Sands flower-loving fly and the many other species
that occur within this ecosystem.
· Echilet Ranch, San
Joaquin MSCP (San Joaquin County, CA) - A $3 million grant award will be
used to acquire this property in order to protect one of
the two last remaining natural habitats of the federally listed large
flowered fiddleneck in partnership with the San Joaquin County
Multi-Species Habitat Conservation Plan. This property acquisition will
significantly reduce the possibility that this species will become
extinct, while also supporting the recovery of State and federally listed
species such as the San Joaquin kit fox and California red-legged
frog.
· San Mateo, Ohlone Shell
Mound Site, San Bruno Mountain HCP (San Mateo County, CA) - An $860,000
grant award will be used for the acquisition of the
Preservation Parcel on San Bruno Mountain to protect 26 acres of
high-value endangered species habitat and an ancient cultural site in
perpetuity. The Preservation Parcel contains habitat for the federally
endangered Callippe silverspot butterfly, a butterfly restricted in range
to San Bruno Mountain. The site also offers the potential to be a recovery
site for two additional butterfly species. The acquisition of the
Preservation Parcel will compliment the San Bruno Mountain HCP and assist
in the conservation of the endangered butterflies and native
ecosystems.
· Sloan Canyon - San Diego
Multiple Species Conservation Program (San Diego County, CA) - $4,875,000
grant will enable project partners to acquire important
habitat along the Sweetwater River in Sloan Canyon downstream
from Loveland Reservoir. The San Diego Multiple Species Conservation
Program (MSCP) identifies this property, which includes 17 parcels
totaling approximately 876 acres, as linking habitat for numerous
threatened and endangered species covered by the plan, while
simultaneously providing core areas for several sensitive biological
resources. The parcels are known to support several pairs of threatened
California gnatcatchers and a significant population of endangered arroyo
toads. While located within the County of San Diego's MSCP sub-area plan,
the property has an approved permit for a sand mine that predates
development of the MSCP. Acquisition of this property will greatly enhance
the County's preserve, while preventing development of the sand mine and
eliminating the threat it poses to an area that supports approximately 30
of the 85 species covered by the
MSCP.
Georgia:
· Georgia
Statewide Conservation Plan for Red-cockaded Woodpeckers on Private Land
(Georgia Statewide) - A $2 million grant will help project partners
acquire permanent conservation easements on up to 7,900
acres in four tracts currently managed as quail habitat. The tracts are
some of the most important remaining properties for conservation in the
Red Hills region, a priority area for the conservation of longleaf pine
and wiregrass. It also provides the habitat for the largest red-cockaded
woodpecker population found on private land (and sixth largest overall in
the world), two of the best remaining old growth longleaf sites, and some
of the best remaining native groundstory vegetation in the southeast.
Acquisition of easements on these tracts will ensure the maintenance and
protection of key components of the Red Hills area.
Indiana:
·
Protection of Indiana Bat Hibernacula within the Garrison Chapel Valley of
Monroe County, Indiana (Monroe County, Indiana) - A $593,325 grant will
support the acquisition of a 293 acre parcel known as the
Hancock property, home to Coon and Grotto caves that provide winter
shelter for hibernating endangered Indiana bats. Since 1985, when winter
disturbances to the caves were removed, the winter population of Indiana
bats has increased steadily to more than 20,000 in both caves. This
acquisition will not only protect the critical winter habitat, but also
ensure protection for fall swarming, spring staging, and summer foraging
for Indiana bats. This property is within the largest karst area of Monroe
County, containing more than 17 miles of known cave passages and hosting a
diversity of cave species that have not been fully surveyed. Other known
state-listed species to benefit through this acquisition include the
bobcat, a cave crayfish, and two cave beetles.
Montana:
· Plum Creek Thompson-Fisher
and Bull River/Lake Lands, Montana (Flathead and Sanders Counties, MT) - A
$1 million grant will enable project partners to purchase a
conservation easement on 4,400 acres of Plum Creek Timber lands
in the Thompson River Valley to maintain the fish and wildlife habitat
values and public access to 86,000 acres of corporate timberland in
perpetuity while allowing for continued commercial timber harvest and
other consistent resource management activities. The conservation easement
would maintain or improve current fish and wildlife values by removing the
threat of subdivision and development and protect in perpetuity prime
habitat for the grizzly bear, bull trout, westslope cutthroat trout,
Canada lynx, bald eagles, golden eagles, black bears, mountain lion,
fisher, upland game birds, and big game ungulates including moose, elk,
white-tail deer, mule deer and, Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep. These lands
are contiguous with 34,824 acres of conservation easement lands acquired
with grant funds obtained in 2001 and 2002.
Texas:
· Balcones
Canyonlands Conservation Plan (Travis County) - A $4,993,794 grant will
allow project partners to purchase high priority tracts
within an area of approximately 700 acres that provide habitat for the
endangered black-capped vireo and the golden-cheeked warbler. The acreage
that will be acquired is adjacent to already protected areas that support
the Balcones Canyonlands Conservation Plan. In 1996, the Service issued a
regional permit to Travis County and the City of Austin for the Balcones
Canyonlands Conservation Plan, which required the protection of at least
30,428 acres. In seven years since the permit's inception, 26,361 acres
have been protected. The preserve is designed to protect eight federally
endangered species and 27 species of concern throughout seven watersheds
in Western Travis County. Partners in this current habitat conservation
effort include the City of Austin, Travis County, the Lower Colorado River
Authority, The Nature Conservancy of Texas, and Travis Audubon Society, as
well as private sector landowners.
· Bexar County Karst
Invertebrate Habitat Preserve (Bexar County) - A $3.5 million grant will
be used to acquire 855 acres around La Cantera's Canyon
Ranch Karst Preserve that will enhance and complement the long-term
preservation and viability of three endangered karst invertebrates in
three caves within the preserve as well as endangered karst invertebrates
in four caves on the acquisition tract. The property also hosts the
endangered golden-cheeked warbler. This tract is adjacent to Government
Canyon State Natural Area and the City of San Antonio's Iron Horse tract
purchased, for Edwards aquifer recharge. Preservation of this acreage will
bring the total contiguous, undeveloped land to approximately 11,000
acres, which will benefit eight other sensitive species dependent upon the
aquatic ecosystems of the Edwards Aquifer.
Utah:
· Washington County Utah
Desert Tortoise Reserve (Washington County, UT) - An $8,348,525 grant will
enable project partners to purchase of up to ten parcels
of Mojave desert tortoise habitat to ensure the viability of a reserve
created as mitigation under the Washington County, Utah HCP. The reserve,
vital to the long term survival and recovery of the desert tortoise, also
benefits additional species, including six federally listed species such
as the bald eagle, southwestern willow flycatcher, Virgin River chub,
woundfin, dwarf bear poppy, and silar pincushion cactus, one proposed
endangered plant, the Shivwits milkvetch, and at least two dozen species
of concern. The purchase of these pristine parcels will significantly
reduce habitat fragmentation in the reserve.
Washington:
· Cedar River Watershed HCP
(King County, WA) - A $1.5 million grant will ensure the protection of 300
acres of riparian habitat along a corridor on the Cedar River, near the
city of Seattle. Acquisition of numerous parcels from willing
sellers will extend conservation benefits from the protected
upper watershed, which supplies Seattle's drinking water, down through the
lower third of the watershed, where development pressure intensifies.
Salmon, steelhead, cutthroat trout and bald eagles, as well as other
resident wildlife will benefit from the acquisition of these habitats,
which represent the best of what remains in the rapidly-urbanizing lower
Cedar River watershed. Partners include King County, Seattle Public
Utilities, and Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. Public
Utilities, and the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.
· Washington Department of
Natural Resources HCP (Washington State) - A $9,959,400 grant will help
the Washington Department of Natural Resources and other partners
acquire more than 3,400 acres of mature conifer forest on
the Olympic and Kitsap Peninsulas, providing benefits to many fish and
wildlife species. Northern spotted owls, marbled murrelets, bald eagles,
bull trout, and salmon all use the lands to be acquired. Protection of
these lands for conservation will provide linkages between high quality
habitats, protect nesting murrelets and owls, and expand protection from
already-conserved areas.
· Yakima River Wildlife
Corridor - Phase II (Kittitas County, WA) - A $1,849,720 grant will be
used by a partnership including the Cascades Conservation Partnership, the
Trust for Public Lands, the U.S. Forest Service, and the Washington
Department of Fish and Wildlife to acquire and protect more than 1140
acres of mature riparian and conifer forests in the Cascade Mountain
Range, along Snoqualmie Pass. Habitat acquisition
achieved by this project will help ensure the protection of habitats
necessary for wildlife movement across Interstate 90.
Habitat Conservation
Planning Assistance Grants by State:
Arizona
· Altar
Valley HCP (Pima County, AZ) - A $40,000 grant will help the Altar Valley
Conservation Alliance, a group of landowners representing nearly all of
the private property in the valley, develop a watershed-wide habitat
protection and restoration plan in cooperation with the Natural Resources
Conservation Service, Arizona State Land Department, and Arizona
Department of Water Resources. The valley harbors one of the last intact
Sonoran savanna grasslands in southern Arizona, as well as riparian and
Madrean oak woodland habitats, and is home to 24 species of concern,
including five species listed under the Federal Endangered Species Act.
The Altar Valley provides habitat for the cactus ferruginous pygmy owl and
is important for the recovery of Pima pineapple cactus. It is the largest
unfragmented landscape in eastern Pima County, encompassing approximately
700,000 acres on the US/Mexico border, including the Buenos Aires National
Wildlife Refuge, the Baboquivari Wilderness Area, the Coyote Mountains
Wilderness Area, a half-million acres of Arizona State School Trust Lands
and private ranch holdings.
· City of Tucson HCP (Pima
County, AZ) - A $327,990 grant will help the City of Tucson develop an HCP
through a collaborative conservation planning effort for more than 45,000
acres within the city's jurisdiction in Southeast Tucson, along the Santa
Cruz River corridor and for extra-territorial holdings of the Tucson Water
Department in the Avra Valley west of the city. The plan, critical to the
conservation and recovery of the endangered cactus ferruginous pygmy-owl
and Pima pineapple cactus, will also provide for the connection of habitat
for vulnerable species and improvement of conservation for riparian
species associated with the Santa Cruz River. The planning area spans the
boundary separating Pima County, Marana, and the Tohono O'odham Nation in
southern Arizona and includes multiple landowners, both public and
private.
· Town of Marana HCP (Pima
and Pinal Counties, AZ) - A $134,990 grant will enable a total of 13
partners, including the Town of Marana, Pima County and the Arizona State
Land Department, to continue development of an HCP to complement other
important regional conservation planning efforts. The primarily Sonoran
desert scrub planning area encompasses approximately 200,000 acres, and
includes varied topography ranging from the effluent-fed Santa Cruz River,
with its cottonwood-willow riparian forest and emergent wetlands, to the
Tortolita Mountains, a vertical rise of 2,800 feet from the river.
Marana's plan will be critical in the conservation and recovery of the
endangered cactus ferruginous pygmy-owl. Within the 75,000-acre town
boundaries, more than 50 percent of the land has been proposed as Critical
Habitat for the cactus ferruginous pygmy owl, and additional lands within
the town are included within proposed Recovery Units for the owl. Aside
from the pygmy-owl, there are 24 other species being considered for
inclusion on the Section 10 permit associated with the HCP.
California
· East Contra Costa HCP
(Contra Costa County, CA) - A $100,000 grant will enable project partners
to develop an HCP to benefit the endangered San Joaquin kit fox,
threatened California red-legged frog, and many other declining species
found in the area. Their survival in this rapidly developing area depends
upon the protection of large blocks of contiguous habitat. This HCP
provides the opportunity to plan urban development in such a manner as to
provide habitat for sensitive species and open space for
residents.
· Kern County Valley Floor
HCP (Kern County, CA) - A $90,000 grant will be used by this partnership
to develop the Kern Valley Floor HCP, which proposes to include
approximately 1.9 million acres on the San Joaquin Valley floor. Among the
28 covered species are several protected by the Endangered Species Act and
the California Endangered Species Act, including the San Joaquin kit fox,
two kangaroo rat species, Bakersfield cactus, and Kern mallow. As planned,
the HCP should allow most urban development activities, normal oil and gas
exploration and development activities to occur. Using weighted habitat
values will encourage potential development within low value habitat while
mitigating impacts on high value habitat. Habitat credits based on habitat
value are created by willing participants, who may then sell those credits
to project proponents seeking mitigation credits. proponents seeking
mitigation credits.
· Placer County HCP /
NCCP (Placer County, CA) - A $100,000 grant will support a large regional
planning effort to conserve habitat for 35 listed and unlisted animals and
plants and their ecosystems within one of the fastest growing Counties in
California. Species likely to benefit from this project include the
Lahontan cutthroat trout, foothill yellow-legged frog, and Pacific fisher.
The area is currently experiencing intense development pressure and this
grant will enable the County to gather the land cover and habitat
inventory information, an essential and fundamental step in the next phase
of the HCP/NCCP planning process. Entire interrelated natural communities
will be protected, which will ensure the viability of populations for a
wide range of plants and animals.
· Sandhills Regional HCP
(Santa Cruz County, CA) - A $100,000 grant will provide funding to the
County of Santa Cruz and City of Scotts Valley to complete Phase 2 of the
development of the Sandhills Regional HCP in Santa Cruz County,
California. The project will result in the development of a conservation
strategy for the Sandhills ecosystem to benefit numerous Federal and
State-listed species, including the Mount Hermon June beetle, Zayante
band-winged grasshopper, Ben Lomond spineflower and Ben Lomond wallflower.
The HCP will identify ways to conserve Sandhills habitat for listed
species in perpetuity as well as sites for mitigating impacts from
development. In addition, the HCP will outline the development of a
program for monitoring and managing listed species in the area, and
institute a streamlined and more cost-effective permitting process for
development projects proposed by landowners.
· Santa Clara County HCP/NCCP
(Santa Clara County, CA) - A $300,000 grant will enable Santa Clara County
to initiate a countywide HCP/NCCP. The first phase of the project is being
undertaken in partnership with the City of San Jose, the 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 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. The HCP/NCCP will provide a comprehensive approach to
conservation and management of multiple species across the 841,000-acre
county, including preservation of much of the remaining habitat for
several federally listed species, establishment of habitat preserves,
habitat restoration, and streamlined regulatory permitting
processes.
· Shasta Plains HCP/NCCP
(Shasta County, CA) - A $200,000 grant award will support the development
of an HCP to cover approximately 250 square miles in southern-central
Shasta County. Vernal pools in the Shasta plains region provide valuable
habitat for a host of rare and sensitive vernal pool species, including
several federally listed species. Many of the remaining vernal pools occur
on privately owned lands and are vulnerable to loss and degradation. This
HCP will protect the vernal pools, riparian habitat and stream corridors,
and oak woodlands, while providing the development community with a
streamlined permitting process.
· Solano HCP/NCCP (Solano and
Yolo Counties, CA) - A $100,000 grant, will help in the development of the
Solano HCP/NCCP, which proposes to cover approximately 900 square miles,
including all of Solano County and a small portion of Yolo County. The
HCP/NCCP proposes to cover a minimum of 36 species, 17 of which are
federally threatened or endangered. Vernal pool, grassland, riparian, and
marsh habitats comprise a large portion of the planning area which is
under intense development pressure. This HCP/NCCP will protect existing
habitat, restore degraded habitats, and contribute to responsible planning
for the expected and mandated growth of four major cities within Solano
County.
· South Sacramento HCP
(Sacramento County, CA) - A $200,000 grant will benefit up to 51 species,
including seven federally threatened and endangered species, within an
area of approximately 490 square miles. The development community and
environmental groups are actively involved in this planning effort that
will streamline the regulatory process and provide benefits to a wide
variety of biological resources including two species of orcutt grass that
are restricted to Sacramento County.
· West Mojave Plan HCP (Yuba
and Sutter Counties, CA) - A $300,000 grant will provide funding to assist
the development of an HCP associated with the 9.4 million-acre West Mojave
Plan, in San Bernardino, Kern, Los Angeles and Inyo Counties. The Service
is consulting with the Bureau of Land Management to minimize impacts to
listed species on Bureau of Land Management lands in the western Mojave
Desert of California, while developing an HCP to cover non-Federal lands
in that area.. Funding will help project partners finalize conservation
strategies for protecting listed species, enabling them to delineate
boundaries for desert wildlife management areas, develop protection
strategies for species in these areas, and implement the final management
plan. Development of the West Mojave Plan and its associated HCP will
benefit numerous local agencies and private landowners in the western
Mojave Desert by promoting a streamlined permitting process. The funding
would also benefit the State and federally threatened desert tortoise, the
State threatened Mojave ground squirrel, and approximately 50 additional
covered species, as well as the ecosystem upon which many other non-listed
species depend.
· Yuba-Sutter HCP (Yuba and
Sutter Counties, CA) - A $200,000 grant will help project partners develop
an HCP to protect vernal pool plants and animals currently listed as
threatened and endangered under the Endangered Species Act, as well as
other sensitive species in this area. Yuba and Sutter counties are
currently undergoing development pressure as Sacramento County becomes
more populated. The primarily agricultural landscape of Yuba and Sutter
Counties is attractive to both developers and home buyers, and development
of an HCP will also help maintain agricultural activities such as grazing
that are beneficial to several sensitive species.
Delaware/Pennsylvania
· Development of an HCP for
the Bog Turtle and Other Wetland Species of Concern in the Southern
Portion of the Delaware West Recovery Subunit (Chester County,
Pennsylvania and New Castle County, Delaware) - A $595,482 grant will help
develop a comprehensive, large-scale HCP for the southern portion of the
Delaware West Recovery Subunit, encompassing significant portions of
Chester County, Pennsylvania and New Castle County, Delaware. The HCP will
benefit the threatened bog turtle and other wetland species of concern, by
identifying bog turtle recovery areas in the HCP planning
region.
Georgia
· Etowah River Basin
(Cherokee, Lumpkin, Pickens, and Forsyth Counties, Georgia) $355,634 - A
$355,634 grant will help develop a comprehensive habitat conservation plan
covering the Etowah River basin allowing county and municipal development
agencies to authorize projects while contributing to the conservation of
numerous aquatic species in the Etowah River basin.
Hawaii
· Coordination and
Planning of a Programmatic Habitat Conservation Plan for Endangered and
Threatened Seabirds on Kauai. (Kauai County) - A $148,989 grant will fund
a 2-year coordinator position in the Hawaii Division of Forestry and
Wildlife to facilitate development of a programmatic HCP to minimize,
mitigate, and monitor the effects of urbanization on two listed seabird
species on the island of Kauai, Hawaii. HCP mitigation measures will call
for protection of seabird nesting colonies by controlling non-native
mammalian predators, and will also benefit one candidate species, several
non-listed bird species and up to 18 species of endangered plants. The
programmatic HCP will provide regulatory certainty for diverse economic
interests, contribute to the recovery of two imperiled seabird species,
and increase public awareness of the community's responsibility to
preserve native Hawaiian species and ecosystems.
Idaho
· Greater Priest Lake Multi
Species HCP (Bonner and Boundary counties, ID) - A $563,000 grant will
assist the Idaho Department of Lands (IDL) and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service as they work with other stakeholders to develop a Habitat
Conservation Plan to minimize the impact of any IDL activity in northern
Idaho on listed species. The HCP will provide conservation benefits to
listed threatened and endangered species, including grizzly bear, bull
trout, lynx, and the critically endangered woodland caribou, while
providing the State of Idaho with assurances of immunity for any "take" of
these species that might occur incidentally to its lawful activities. Both
Idaho and the species will benefit from this HCP. The IDL will be able to
fulfill its mandate to maximize the long term return from these endowment
lands to the beneficiaries without fear of violating the Endangered
Species Act, and the conservation of listed species will be
enhanced.
Montana
· Burlington Northern Santa
Fe Railway HCP (Glacier and Flathead Counites, MT) - A $75,000 grant will
help fund development and implementation of the Burlington Northern Santa
Fe Railway HCP, providing a unique opportunity to benefit a large number
of species in a geographic area that includes a wild and scenic river
corridor and is adjacent to Glacier National Park and the Great Bear
Wilderness. While the emphasis is on minimizing and mitigating the effects
of railroad operations on grizzly bears, these efforts will also minimize
effects on other predators including gray wolves, Canada lynx, bobcats,
wolverines, black bear, and mountain lions. Additionally, efforts to
enhance habitat will benefit a variety of other species including bald
eagles, bull trout, westslope cutthroat trout, moose, elk, mule deer,
whitetail deer, beaver, mink, otter and waterfowl. This HCP will foster
existing positive working relationship among industry, governmental and
conservation interests that was developed through the formation of the
Great Northern Environmental Stewardship Area.
Oregon
· Agate
Desert Multi-species Vernal Pool HCP/WCP (Jackson County, OR) - A $143,000
grant will be used to develop an HCP, coordinated with a State Wetland
Conservation Plan, for the vernal pool wetlands in the urban core of the
Agate Desert north of Medford, Oregon, in and around the unincorporated
town of White City. These plans would provide the framework for the
coordinated conservation of three federally listed species (threatened
vernal pool fairy shrimp and two endangered plants associated with vernal
pools) and a host of other rare species associated with the unique vernal
pools. Coordinated planning will reduce degradation and loss of this
unique habitat.
· HCP/EIS for Western
Snowy Plover in Oregon (Clatsop, Tillamook, Lincoln, Lane, Douglas, Coos,
and Curry counties, OR) - A $200,000 grant will help the Oregon Parks and
Recreation Department develop an HCP/EIS that not only provides for the
conservation of the western snowy plover, but also takes into account the
importance of some 212 acres of sandy ocean beaches for human recreation.
The Oregon Parks and Recreation Department has jurisdiction over most
coastal beaches, including much of the critical habitat essential for the
conservation and recovery of the species.
Texas
· Barton Springs / Edwards
Aquuifer Conservation District HCP (Hays and Travis Counties, TX)- A
$316,000 grant will assist the Barton Springs/Edwards Aquifer Conservation
District (the District), a groundwater conservation district mandated to
conserve, protect, and enhance the groundwater resources of the Barton
Springs segment of the Edwards aquifer. By preparing the Environmental
Impact Statement and developing and implementing the regional HCP the
District will identify the effects of groundwater pumping on the Barton
Springs and Austin blind salamanders and set forth comprehensive measures
to minimize and mitigate for those impacts, including incidental take, as
a result of permitted pumpage. The District, together with plan partners,
through this regional HCP, hopes to secure the survival and recovery of
the Barton Springs and Austin blind salamanders, and also provide
protection and security for the Balcones cave and bifurcated cave
amphipods as well as the Edwards Aquifer diving beetle.
· Williamson County Regional
Habitat Conservation Plan (Williamson County, TX)- A $200,000 grant will
be used to assist the Williamson County Karst Foundation in developing a
regional HCP for the conservation of 9 species, including 5 endangered
species, 1 candidate, and 3 other rare animal and plant species, found in
Williamson County, one of the fastest growing counties in the United
States. Habitat protection for listed and rare species therefore is
essential to the conservation of the listed and rare species found in that
county. Of the three endangered karst invertebrates included in the
proposal, two of the species occur in only one other county outside of
Williamson County and one species occurs only in Williamson County. Since
very few caves and their associated ecosystems have been preserved in
perpetuity for any of the three species, preservation of lands under the
HCP that provide perpetual protection and management of caves containing
these species will contribute to their recovery and potential downlisting.
Preservation of high quality habitat in Williamson County will remove
threats associated with suburban development and benefit all of the listed
and rare species proposed to be covered under the HCP.
Washington
· Broughton Land Company
Native Fish HCP (Columbia County, WA) - A $24,200 grant will be used to
help finalize the development of an HCP covering more than 38,000 acres of
farm, forest, and range lands in eastern Washington state. These privately
owned lands contain several miles of streams supporting bull trout,
steelhead, and chinook salmon. HCP conservation measures will improve
stream and riparian conditions.
· Dungeness CIDMP/HCP
(Clallam and Jefferson counties, WA) - A $70,000 grant will help project
partners develop an HCP associated with a pilot Comprehensive Irrigation
District Management Plan (CIDMP). Together, the CIDMP and the HCP will
provide conservation benefits for federally listed fish while meeting the
long-term water needs of irrigation districts. Significant aquatic habitat
improvements would be realized through improvements to irrigation
infrastructure, operations, and maintenance, which would result in
increased stream flows.
·
· Family Forest Habitat Conservation
Plan for Lewis County (Lewis County, WA) - A $389,259 grant will fund
development of an HCP providing a programmatic, multi-landowner approach
for small family forests seeking management flexibility and an alternative
from state forest practices rules. The HCP is expected to provide equal or
better conservation than current state forest practice rules, and cover
private lands in Lewis County.
· Washington Forests and Fish
HCP (Statewide) - A $1,127,047 grant will be used to complete the HCP
planning process. This HCP would result in obtaining federal assurances
for Washington State's forest practices rules. Conservation benefits are
expected for aquatic and riparian species on 10.3 million acres of
non-federal forest lands.
· Washington State Aquatic
Lands Habitat Conservation Planning Assistance (Statewide) - A $121,304
grant, will support an HCP planning effort, funded in part by activities
undertaken in both fresh and saltwater areas regulated and leased by
Washington State's Department of Natural Resources, covering more than 2.4
million acres in 39 counties. The HCP has the potential to complement
riparian and aquatic protection provided by state forest practices rules,
and to ensure environmental protection while encouraging direct public use
and access of aquatic lands.
West
Virginia
· West Virginia Northern
Flying Squirrel and Cheat Mountain Salamander HCP at Snowshoe Mountain
Resort (Pocahontas County) - An $84,880 grant will help fund development
of an HCP to benefit the West Virginia Northern Flying Squirrel and Cheat
Mountain Salamander. The project will determine the presence or absence of
the West Virginia northern flying squirrel along the western slope of
Cheat Mountain; develop a habitat quality ranking and define the breeding
season for West Virginia northern flying squirrels at Snowshoe; survey for
the Cheat Mountain salamander in areas covered by the focused HCP;
identify and evaluate potential translocation sites for the salamander;
and use satellite imagery of Snowshoe to identify squirrel and salamander
habitat.
Recovery Land
Acquisition Grants by State:
Alaska
· Spectacled Eider Nesting
Habitat Protection Project (Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta) - A $178,446 grant will
support acquisition of conservation easements or fee title to
approximately 2,000 acres of high quality spectacled eider nesting habitat
on privately owned parcels within designated critical habitat on the
Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta, in western Alaska. Spectacled eider populations on
the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta declined by 96 percent between the
1970's-1990's. The coastal fringe of the Yukon-Kuskokwim Delta provides
the species' highest density breeding habitat. Acquisition of easements or
title to key private inholdings within this coastal fringe will improve
management of lands under diverse ownership, minimize the threat of
habitat fragmentation, and aid public-private efforts to reduce impacts to
nesting habitat from use of all-terrain vehicles. This project is intended
to be a catalyst for a large-scale waterfowl and wetlands protection
effort.
Arizona:
· Coal Mine Springs
(Santa Cruz County) - A $750,000 grant will support the protection of
1,400 acres around Coal Mine Springs providing a high recovery benefit to
the endangered Gila topminnow, the second largest population in existence
and only one of fourteen surviving natural populations. one of only
fourteen Securing this area will help protect the whole Lower Sonoita
Creek population of Gila topminnow, a key objective of the draft Recovery
Plan for the species. In addition, the area protected is free of competing
non-native fishes, a primary threat to the Gila topminnow. The proposal
will also provide protected foraging habitat for the endangered lesser
long-nosed bat and a riparian corridor for the Mexican spotted owl.
Partners include the Arizona Game and Fish Department, Trust for Public
Land and Arizona State Parks.
· Hayhook Ranch (Pima County,
AZ) - A $353,478 grant will help acquire and protect a corridor of habitat
for the cactus ferruginous pygmy-owl. The 839-acre acquisition provides
nesting habitat and allows pygmy owls to move between the Tohono O'odham
Nation and the Coyote Mountain Wilderness Area. The 839 acre parcel occurs
within Recovery Area 1 of the pygmy owl's draft Recovery Plan. The
proposed acquisition may also provide foraging habitat for the endangered
lesser long-nosed bat and as many as fifteen Priority Vulnerable Species
that could occur on the property.
Arkansas
· Pondberry and red-cockaded
woodpecker land acquisition (Clay, Jackson, Monroe Counties) - A $288,930
grant will provide funding for targeted land acquisitions harboring
populations of endangered pondberry where they currently have no
protection, and will also provide a buffer to protect a large population
at the Stateline Sand Ponds Natural Area. The recovery plan for the
pondberry lists 36 extant populations distributed in 6 states. The major
threat to the continued existence of pondberry is alteration or
destruction of its habitat through land clearing, drainage modification,
or timber harvesting. Additional habitat will be protected at the Pine
City Headwater Swamp Conservation Area for potential reestablishment
efforts. Acquisition of additional lands in Arkansas suitable to support
stable populations of pondberry and/or to provide buffers to currently
protected populations will be important to the recovery of this plant and
will protect it from further loss of habitat. The acquisitions will also
protect the last remaining breeding group of the Mississippi Alluvial
Plain population of the endangered red-cockaded woodpecker and provide it
with the potential for population growth.
California:
· Buena Vista Property (Santa
Cruz County) - A $540,215 grant will help project partners, including the
Service, California Department of Fish and Game and the Trust for Public
Lands, acquire and protect 187 acres in Santa Cruz County. The acquisition
will protect one of only eleven breeding ponds of the long-toed salamander
and help connect habitat that supports another population at the nearby
Ellicott Slough National Wildlife Refuge and Santa Cruz Long-toed
Salamander State Ecological Reserve. It also provides habitat for one of
the larger of only seven populations of the robust spineflower, and for
the California tiger salamander, a candidate species.
· Colton Dune Ecosystem
(San Bernardino County) - A $500,000 grant will help fund the acquisition
of between five and 15 acres intended to protect portions of the Colton
Dune ecosystem and prevent extinction of the Delhi Sand flower-loving fly,
which is declining due to widespread habitat loss and degradation.
Acquisition will also protect several other federally and State listed
species native to this area, including coastal California gnatcatcher, Los
Angeles pocket mouse and western burrowing owl. Partners include
California Department of Fish and Game, California Department of
Transportation, San Bernardino and Riverside Counties, local
jurisdictions, the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation and Federal
Highway Administration.
· Kanaka III/Gabbro Soil
Plant Habitat (El Dorado County) - A $465,000 grant will enable project
partners acquire 247 acres in the central Sierra Nevada foothills of
California. The acquisition falls within the approximately 5,000-acre
conceptual boundary of the Pine Hill Preserve and will help prevent many
endangered and threatened plant species from declining irreversibly due to
the conversion of habitat to urban uses. The remaining natural communities
are highly fragmented and depend on marginal habitat. Partners include the
Service, California Department of Fish and Game, American Rivers
Conservancy, Bureau of Land Management and El Dorado County.
· La Sierra Canyon, Santa
Monica Mountains (Los Angeles County)- A $450,000 grant will enable the
Service, California Department of Fish and Game, and the Mountains
Restoration Trust to acquire 91 acres in the Santa Monica Mountains. This
biologically diverse, prime land provides habitat for important plants
including the endangered Lyon's pentachaeta and threatened marcescent
dudleya, as well as four State listed birds. The acquisition will connect
major park holdings from Topanga State Park, Point Mugu State Park and
Malibu Creek State Park and is part of an ongoing multi-agency effort to
protect critically important habitats in the Santa Monica
Mountains.
· Yreka Phlox at China Hills
(Siskiyou County) - A $122,000 grant will help acquire and protect 35
acres that provide important habitat for federally endangered Yreka phlox.
The objective of the acquisition of these three parcels is to conserve the
China Hill population of the Yreka phlox, a plant that is also protected
by the State of California. The China Hill population is one of only four
known occurrences of this species. Partners include the Service,
California Department of Fish and Game, the City of Yreka, and private
landowners.
Florida
· Warm Mineral Springs Creek
Protection Program (Sarasota County) - A $455,835 grant will help acquire
lands adjacent to Warm Mineral Springs Creek and identify management
procedures to protect the endangered West Indian manatees that use the
area as a refuge. Acquisition of a 32.5 acre parcel will allow the County
to control access and protect manatees within the creek and its critical
warm water refuge. The site is a winter/cold weather refuge for up to 100
manatees. It is one of the largest refuges in southwest Florida and
possibly the only naturally occurring mineral spring. The manatee recovery
plan identifies land adjacent to Warm Mineral Spring in Sarasota County as
property that should be considered for acquisition due to its importance
as manatee habitat. The surrounding scrubby flatwoods support foraging
habitat for gopher tortoises and Florida scrub-jays. Several listed plant
species occur, including the golden leather fern, bromeliads, and the
Florida coontie.
Illinois/Iowa
· Eastern prairie fringed
orchid (Grundy County, IL, Jackson county, IA) - A $199,409 grant will be
used by project partners to acquire an easement in Illinois within the
Hildy Prairie and purchase a 50-acre parcel within Baldwin Marsh in Iowa
for eastern prairie fringed orchid conservation. Both parcels contain
stable populations of the threatened orchid. When the easement is acquired
in Illinois, the property will be dedicated as an Illinois Nature
Preserve, giving it the strongest perpetual protection available under
Illinois law. Hildy Prairie, one of the largest known flowering sites
within the range of the eastern prairie fringed orchid, is also the
primary source of seed for conservation efforts throughout Illinois.
Baldwin Marsh, Iowa, one of only four known eastern prairie fringed orchid
populations in the State, is the largest site having about 2,000 blooming
plants. In 1994 this site contained only 400 blooming
specimens.
Michigan
· Mitchell's satyr habitat -
Grand River Fen (Hillsdale and Jackson Counties) -A $375,000 grant will
enable project partners including the Michigan Department of Natural
Resources and the Nature Conservancy of Michigan to acquire and protect
154 acres adjacent to the Grand River Fen Preserve located in
south-central Michigan. The site provides excellent habitat for the
endangered Mitchell's satyr, as well as additional globally rare species
including the Eastern massasauga rattlesnake, a candidate for ESA
protection; tamarack tree cricket; blazing star borer; Powesheik skipper;
spotted turtle, and others. This purchase will increase the management and
protection of habitat to a total of 630 acres for these species, connect
parcels currently owned and managed by The Nature Conservancy, and
increase the lands within the primary protection boundary for the
Preserve.
Missouri
· Indiana and Gray Bat Cave
Acquisition (Laclede County) - A $60,000 grant will be used by the
Missouri Department of Conservation to acquire 52 acres surrounding a cave
located in south-central Missouri's Ozark region. The cave provides
important shelter for a maternal colony of gray bats and functions as a
hibernation site for wintering Indiana bats. The cave has about one-half
mile of mapped passages; future exploration of the cave system will yield
additional biodiversity information. It is expected that the acquisition
of this cave will provide additional recovery actions that will assist in
the downlisting of gray bats from endangered to threatened
status.
· Ozark cavefish land
acquisition (Newton County, MO) - A $80,000 grant award will help the
Missouri Department of Conservation acquire a one-acre inholding within
the Capps Creek Conservation Area. This property is located within 100
yards of a state-owned well that was recently discovered to harbor
threatened Ozark cavefish. The acquisition costs also include planting
vegetation, site clean-up, and well capping.
Nevada
· Lockes Ranch(Nye County) -
A $900,000 grant will help secure key habitats essential for recovery of
the threatened Railroad Valley springfish. The acquisition of 460 acres in
Nye County will protect source pools and/or outflows for three major
spring systems containing identified recovery populations and critical
habitat for the springfish. Project partners include the Service, Nevada
Department of Wildlife and the BLM.
New York
· Karner blue butterfly &
Prairie Peninsula/Lake Plain bog turtle habitat acquisition (Saratoga
County) - A $347,381 grant will help project partners including the Nature
Conservancy and New York State Department of Environmental Conservation
acquire and protect Saratoga West and Saratoga Sandplains properties.
Acquisition of these parcels will significantly advance Karner blue
butterfly recovery and open-space conservation efforts in New York.
Nebraska
· Land Acquisition for
American Burying Beetle (Lincoln County) -A $252,000 grant will enable the
Nebraska Game and Parks Commission to acquire and protect 670 acres of
important prairie grassland habitat to benefit populations of American
burying beetle. This area of Nebraska harbors one of the largest
populations of burying beetles in the nation. The project acquisition will
also serve as a demonstration site for prairie management to encourage
similar improvements by neighboring private landowners. Protection of this
habitat also provides significant benefits for prairie grasslands and
declining grassland birds.
North
Carolina
· Acquisition of the Beck
Tract (Onslow County) - A $556,150 grant will help acquire 2,432 acres of
longleaf pine habitat to provide perpetual protection to an essential
habitat corridor linking two forested sections of Camp Lejune. The
acquisition will provide foraging habitat and future nesting habitat for
the red-cockaded woodpecker (RCW). Having this parcel under appropriate
management will also facilitate RCW recovery efforts on the base by
preventing further encroachment and land use conversion. The area has been
identified as having good foraging habitat and having potential to provide
good nesting habitat within 30 to 40 years. Protection of this habitat
will enable project partners, including the North Carolina Wildlife
Resources Commission, Nature Conservancy and U.S. Marine Corps, to
establish additional breeding groups within the area's primary core
recovery population and to create a more contiguous land mass for this
population. This proposed site also has a good probability of supporting
the rough leaved loosestrife. Camp Lejeune is listed as one of the nine
known population centers for this endangered plant in its recovery
plan.
North
Dakota
· Conservation of Critical
Habitat at Missouri/Yellowstone River Confluence (McKenzie County) - A
$250,000 grant will enable the North Dakota Game and Fish Dept, American
Foundation for Wildlife, The Conservation Fund and the North Dakota
Natural Resources Trust acquire approximately 1,387 acres at the
confluence of the Missouri and Yellowstone Rivers to protect and enhance
habitat for the endangered pallid sturgeon. This land represents the last
stronghold and best remaining habitat for the pallid sturgeon, one of
strongest populations of paddlefish, and strong populations of sicklefin
and sturgeon chub, and will improve management opportunities for least
terns and piping plover.
Oklahoma
· Least Tern &
Arkansas River Shiner Habitat Protection (Ellis County) -A $307,464 grant
will help protect 3,370 acres of the Canadian River floodplain and
associated uplands, including three miles of essential nesting habitat for
the least tern. Protecting this habitat will benefit a stable population
of breeding terns 10 miles away at the Packsaddle Wildlife Management Area
(funded in FY02 through Recovery Land Acquisition) by extending available
habitat along the river. The proposed acquisition lies within the Oklahoma
reach of the Canadian River and harbors a significant population of the
Arkansas River shiner. Protecting this stretch of the river from
development will buffer the area and protect water quality. Intact lesser
prairie chicken habitat also exists on the proposed acquisition site, and
chickens exist both on the property and on neighboring parcels. Private
lands management is the best opportunity for long-term recovery of the
species, and The Nature Conservancy will use this area as a demonstration
area for prescribed burning, grass banking, and other management
strategies.
Tennessee
· Asher Farm Tract - Clinch
River (Hancock County) - A $1.685 million grant will help acquire and
protect a significant portion of the shoal along the Clinch River at Kyles
Ford, which harbors the most diverse mussel community in Tennessee. The
Clinch River is one of the last major strongholds of Cumberlandian mussel
fauna, and the Nature Conservancy's scientific planning process has
identified Kyles Ford mussel shoal as the most biologically diverse,
endangered mussel habitat on Earth. The 850-acre parcel that will be
acquired is home to 10 federally listed mussel species. By acquiring
property along the river corridor, instituting buffer strips, stabilizing
stream banks and preventing runoff and sedimentation, this project will
mark a significant step in efforts to permanently protect the Clinch
River, its habitats, and fauna. The acquisition includes almost 3 miles of
river front and 850 acres of adjacent riparian frontage to the Clinch
River.
· Large-flowered skullcap
Land Acquisition (Hamilton County) - A $562,500 grant will help acquire a
large tract of land along the Cumberland Plateau stream gorge that harbors
populations and habitat for the threatened Virginia spiraea,
large-flowered skullcap, and bald eagle. The parcel will connect to an
even larger area of conservation lands, including a Forest Legacy project
area and the North Chickamauga Creek Gorge State Natural Area. The
acquisition encompasses approximately 1,500 acres of privately owned
timber land that has been protected voluntarily as a Registered State
Natural Area. In 2001, a total of 321 plants was found in two populations
of large-flowered skullcap. In 2002, a total of 1,005 plants was found in
four populations. Placing this property in public ownership will help the
Service reach its recovery goals and will likely contribute to the future
delisting of this plant.
Texas
· Peterson Ranch (Kendall
County) - A $252,300 grant will enable the Texas Parks and Wildlife
Department, Nature Conservancy of Texas, Bexar Land Trust, Environmental
Defense and a private landowner to protect 150 acres through a
conservation easement. The acquisition funded by the grant is adjacent to
the 500 acre Peterson Ranch, currently managed for endangered black capped
vireo and the subject property of a draft Safe Harbor Agreement. This
parcel will expand management opportunities to the total 650 acres,
allowing for a greater variety of management techniques such as prescribed
burns to be employed. The acquisition will be used as a showcase to
encourage conservation on private lands by providing a demonstration of
proper management techniques and compatible land uses. In addition, the
proposed parcel contains golden-cheeked warbler habitat, and golden-cheeks
have been documented on the adjacent Peterson Ranch. By providing a
successional mosaic of forest types for the black-capped vireo habitat
will continue to grow into suitability for this endangered warbler.
Utah
· Provo River/Hobble
Creek Restoration (Lake and Utah Counties) - A $235,237 grant will
partially fund the purchase of land along the Provo River and Hobble Creek
to protect the only known spawning and rearing habitat for the endangered
June sucker. Project partners, including the Nature Conservancy, Central
Utah Water Conservancy, Utah Department of Natural Resources and Ducks
Unlimited will also create and restore wetland and aquatic habitat.
Acquisition of 14 parcels totaling 164 acres will protect open space
within the rapidly developing Salt Lake City urban corridor.
Virginia
· Purchase of Virginia
sneezeweed habitat (Augusta County) - A $206,054 grant will help project
partners purchase two tracts of land totaling approximately 120 acres at
Mt. Joy Church Pond in Augusta County, Virginia. These parcels will be
dedicated as a state natural area preserve. State natural area preserves
are protected in perpetuity and managed to maintain and restore natural
processes and the native species and natural communities on site. The
benefit of this project will be to protect and manage one of the largest
and most viable population of the threatened Virginia
sneezeweed.
· Purchase of Virginia
big-eared and Indiana bat habitat (Tazewell County) - A $56,362 grant will
enable the Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries and the West
Virginia Cave Conservancy to complete the acquisition of two caves and an
uphill site that encompasses the watershed for surface drainage into the
caves. It will provide permanent protection for a major Virginia big-eared
bat hibernation and maternity cave, and will also protect a colony of
hibernating Indiana bats. This is a major step towards recovery efforts
and will help in the reclassification of the Virginia big-eared
bat.
Washington
· Asotin Creek (Asotin
County) - A $600,000 grant will help the Washington Department of Fish and
Wildlife and the Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation acquire and protect 8,500
acres of quality steppe grassland and 5.5 miles of riparian habitat in
southeastern Washington. This strategic acquisition, surrounded by federal
and State lands, will contribute to the implementation of recovery plans
for threatened bull trout, bald eagle, and other species. It will also
benefit chinook salmon, Columbia spotted frog and the State-listed
sharp-tailed grouse.
· Ebey's Landing (Island
County) - A $1.5 million grant will help fund a land acquisition that will
result in the permanent protection of one of the last eleven golden
paintbrush populations in the world. The 33-acre site is one of the three
largest extant habitats for this species, with the greatest potential for
meeting recovery goals for the species. Threats to the species are
imminent. Project partners include the Whidbey Camano Land Trust, The
Nature Conservancy, National Park Service, Washington Natural Heritage
Program, and Department of Natural Resources.
West
Virginia
· Habitat acquisition for the
flat-spired three-toothed land snail (Monongalia, Preston Counties) - A
$295,485 grant will support the acquisition of an additional 500 acres of
habitat for the federally threatened flat-spired three-toothed land snail
and add that habitat to the West Virginia Division of Natural Resources's
existing Snakehill Wildlife Management Area. This land is currently
occupied by the snail and will be managed to protect and conserve the
species.