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Six Most Threatened U.S. National Wildlife Refuges Named

WASHINGTON, DC, August 10, 2005 ENS - Increasing human populations and planned development have placed six of the nation’s 545 national wildlife refuges and their surrounding buffer zones at risk, according to a report released today by the National Wildlife Refuge Association, a nonprofit conservation group.

The association's 2005 State of the System Report indicates that buffer zones actually have more agriculture, subdivision and other human activity than the national average.

Buffer zones are critical to the protection of wildlife because they provide animals with resources needed for survival, but there is more development near these sensitive refuges than on less sensitive areas further away from them.

“Buffer zones are absolutely critical to the National Wildlife Refuge System,” said Evan Hirsche, president of the National Wildlife Refuge Association, which issued the report.

“Since many of the lands within buffer zones are privately held, we must work closely with private landowners to ensure the long-term protection of these national treasures.”

The six most threatened national wildlife refuges (NWR) are:

  • Pocosin Lakes National Wildlife Refuge, North Carolina: The proposed construction of a military outlying landing field on a 33,000 acre site five miles outside the refuge boundary puts the entire refuge at risk.

    This 113,000 acre refuge located six miles south of Columbia has over 100,000 acres of pocosin habitat. Pocosin wetlands are flat and their natural drainage is poor. More than 200 species of birds, including bald eagles and the endangered red-cockaded woodpecker, and over 40 species of reptiles and amphibians use the refuge habitats.

    Among the 40 species of mammals are large populations white-tailed deer, the only wild population of endangered red wolves in the world, and one of the largest populations of black bears east of the Mississippi River.

  • Horicon National Wildlife Refuge, Wisconsin: The proposed construction of 133 wind turbines within 1.2 miles of the Horicon Marsh infringes upon the refuge’s buffer zone. The turbines’ 400 foot arms would circle in the airspace where birds fly, placing them at risk, according to the National Wildlife Refuge Association.

    Horicon

    Horicon National Wildlife Refuge is a Wetland of International Importance under the Ramsar Convention. (Photo by Ryan Hagerty courtesy USFWS)
    Over 21,000 acres in size, Horicon National Wildlife Refuge is located on the west branch of the Rock River in southeastern Wisconsin and encompasses the northern two-thirds of Horicon Marsh. This shallow, peat-filled lakebed gouged out by the Wisconsin Glacier about 12,000 thousand years ago.

    In 1990, Horicon Marsh, the largest freshwater cattail marsh in the United States, was designated a "Wetland of International Importance" by the Ramsar Convention. It has also been designated as a "Globally Important Bird Area" by the American Bird Conservancy and a unit of the Ice Age National Scientific Reserve.

    Birds found in and around the marsh include great blue and black-crowned night herons, great egrets, little blue and tricolored herons, snowy egrets, peregrine falcons, ruff, buff-breasted sandpipers, black-necked stilts, white-fronted geese, eared and red-necked grebes and American avocets.

  • Stone Lakes National Wildlife Refuge, California: The newly incorporated city of Elk Grove, which has begun to envelop the refuge’s eastern border, is the second fastest growing city in the nation, according to a U.S. Census report released in July.

    The Stone Lakes National Wildlife Refuge, located south of Sacramento, lies within the Sacramento-San Joaquin delta, the destination of thousands of migrating waterfowl, shorebirds, and other water birds.

    The refuge is protecting scarce natural habitats and agricultural resources in an area threatened by urban sprawl and agricultural changes. Stone Lakes Refuge contains both seasonal and permanent wetlands, riparian forest, and grasslands, as well as some of the last remaining freshwater lakes in the Central Valley.

    Large populations of migratory water birds, a major rookery for several colonial nesting species such as great blue herons, and a warm water fishery are found here as are endangered Swainson's hawks, and greater sandhill cranes.

  • White River National Wildlife Refuge, Arkansas: Rice, long a staple of the region, requires more water than many other crops. To ensure the survival of local rice crops, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers is constructing a pumping station capable of sucking water out of the White River and into reservoirs at the rate of more than 1,600 cubic feet per second.

    White River

    Ducks in the flooded forests of the White River National Wildlife Refuge (Photo courtesy Recreation.gov)
    The refuge lies in the floodplain of the White River near where it meets the Mississippi River. The refuge encompasses one of the largest remaining bottomland hardwood forests in the Mississippi River Valley.

    Neotropical migratory songbirds use the refuge as a stopping point on their journey to and from central and south America. The refuge is an autumn stopping point on the Mississippi Flyway for mallards, gadwalls, American widgeon, and greenwing teal. During some years, up to 350,000 birds will winter in these flooded bottomland hardwood forests.

  • Alaska Maritime National Wildlife Refuge, Alaska: A major oil spill fouled more than 760 beach sites in the refuge when the Malaysian freighter Selendang Ayu lost power, drifted aground and split in half on December 8, 2004. The vessel carried 470,000 gallons of fuel oil.

    The worst spill in U.S. marine waters since the Exxon Valdez accident 15 years earlier is still being cleaned by more than 150 field response personnel and 21 vessels, hundreds of volunteers and dozens of Native corporations. Officials hope to complete cleanup operations by October 15.

    Impacted wildlife consists of 781 birds observed oiled, 29 captured for rehabilitation, 10 released, and 1,609 dead. Mammals consist of 18 observed oiled, zero captured and six dead.

    Alaska Maritime's seashore lands provide nesting habitat for approximately 40 million seabirds, or about 80 percent of Alaska's nesting seabird population.

  • Desert National Wildlife Refuge, Nevada: The southern boundary of the refuge is half a mile from the northern boundary of metropolitan Las Vegas, the third fastest growing U.S. city. The city’s demand for water has led to calls for drilling wells and extracting scarce water from within this fragile habitat.

    sheep

    The desert bighorn sheep is Nevada's state animal. (Photo courtesy First Lady Dema Guinn)
    The Desert National Wildlife Range encompasses 1.6 million acres of the Mojave Desert in southern Nevada and is the largest national wildlife refuge in the continental 48 states. The range was established in 1936, for the protection, enhancement, and maintenance of the desert bighorn sheep.

    Bighorn can be extremely intolerant of human interference, and the 1.5 million acres of the Desert Range provides much needed shelter, refuge personnel say. Having rebounded from a record low of 300 in the late 1930s, the desert bighorn population now numbers about 750. This is below the peak numbers recorded in the late 1970s to middle 1980s, which coincided with a period of high rainfall.

    Water is the most important limiting factor for bighorn populations and is in short supply on much of the range. For this reason, refuge personnel say 30 springs have been improved and 26 guzzlers have been developed. Guzzlers, or rain catchments, collect precipitation and deliver it to an underground storage tank that fills a small drinking trough.

    As a remedy for these threats, the National Wildlife Refuge Association is urging Congress and the Bush administration to strengthen incentives for private landowners to practice conservation that will benefit the refuges.

    In addition, the association proposes conserving more land through acquisition and easements; allocating more funds at the state level; conducting more research to determine priorities; and establishing preventative systems for shipping disasters near refuges.

    The National Wildlife Refuge System contains 545 refuges and 3,000 waterfowl production areas located in all 50 states and several U.S. territories. The refuges help protect 700 bird species, 220 mammal species and 200 kinds of fish.

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