Ga. Teams with 3 States to Conserve Sandhills
Tony Potts
06-03-2009
Georgia and three neighboring states will use a $1 million
federal grant to increase the quality, quantity and connectivity
of prime sandhill habitat, benefiting gopher tortoises and
possibly 54 other sandhill species in need of significant
conservation measures.
The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service recently announced the funding as
part of the agency’s State Wildlife Grants Competitive Program.
Georgia is joining with Alabama, Florida, South Carolina and
conservation groups in each state to provide $1.66 million in matching
money and work.
The Multistate Sandhills Ecological Restoration project could help keep
gopher tortoises off federal endangered or threatened species lists and
provide for the long-term conservation of Southeastern sandhill species
varying from southern hognose snakes to Bachman’s sparrows and striped
newts.
One goal is restoring nearly 38,600 acres of priority public and
private sandhill sites over the next three years. The focus in Georgia?
Rebuilding habitat, said Matt Elliott, a Nongame Conservation Section
program manager with the state Department of Natural Resources.
`Depending on the area, we’ll be doing prescribed fire, removal of
sand pine (and) planting of longleaf pine,` said Elliott, who will
coordinate work in this state.
Sand pine is not native to Georgia sandhills, which are areas of deep
sandy soils with longleaf pine and scrub oak species, especially turkey
oak, in a low, open-tree canopy over drought-tolerant shrubs, grasses
and cactus. Rated a conservation priority in each of the four states’
Wildlife Action Plans, sandhills range from southern Alabama to across
Georgia’s Coastal Plain, far down the Florida peninsula and into the
Carolinas. The habitat is a type of longleaf pine forest, considered one
of the most critically endangered ecosystems in the world.
Sandhills have been degraded or destroyed by development, conversion to
uses such as timber and row-crop agriculture, and a lack of natural
fires that keep invasive hardwoods at bay and promote the growth of
grasses that provide forage for gopher tortoises and other wildlife.
The large-scale restoration needed for sandhills reaches beyond
individual states. The project will target high-priority sites, banking
on help from partners such as The Nature Conservancy and Project
Orianne, a private effort to restore federally protected eastern indigo
snakes throughout their range.
Work will include increasing controlled burning, removing invasive
species, controlling hardwood trees and shrubs through mechanical and
chemical means, and replanting longleaf pines. At least a fifth of the
restoration will be on private land. Surveys of plants and birds will
help measure the impact. Gopher tortoise surveys will contribute to
management of these long-lived, slow-to-reproduce animals.
The tortoise, Georgia’s state reptile, is a keystone sandhills
species. Gopher tortoise burrows are used by more than 300 species of
invertebrates and a number of invertebrates. Healthy tortoise
populations are critical to wildlife diversity in Southeastern upland
habitats. Yet, the species is federally threatened west of the Mobile
and Tombigbee rivers in Alabama and Mississippi, and there are two
petitions to list it as threatened in the eastern part of its range.
The sandhills project actually has roots in a partnership called the
Gopher Tortoise Candidate Conservation Agreement, which the four states
formed in 2007 to develop a tortoise conservation strategy. Georgia is
also wrapping up a sandhills inventory aimed at assessing conservation
needs of rare plants and animals. “That helped us pinpoint the areas
where we wanted to work” in the multi-state effort, Elliott said.
Related initiatives include a Healthy Forest Reserve Program by the
Natural Resources Conservation Service to restore sandhill habitats
along Georgia’s Fall Line and a Wal-Mart Foundation-funded project
within the DNR’s Nongame Conservation Section to educate teachers
about sandhills.
The four-state project is ambitious, Elliott agreed. But, considering
the other projects also focused on conserving sandhills, “It all sort
of adds up,” he said.
Georgians who buy wildlife conservation license plates - the bald eagle
or the hummingbird versions - help conserve nongame wildlife and natural
habitats such as sandhills. Sales of the plates are vital to the Nongame
Conservation Section, which receives no state funds for its mission to
help conserve Georgia wildlife not legally hunted, fished for or
trapped, as well as rare plants and habitats.
|