1 / 19

Virginia Wildlife Action Plan

Virginia Wildlife Action Plan. David K. Whitehurst Virginia Department of Game and Inland Fisheries. Federal and State Support. Congressionally mandated and funded under U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Wildlife Conservation and Restoration Program and State Wildlife Grants program since FY 2001

lirit
Download Presentation

Virginia Wildlife Action Plan

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. VirginiaWildlife Action Plan David K. Whitehurst Virginia Department ofGame and Inland Fisheries

  2. Federal and State Support • Congressionally mandated and funded under U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Wildlife Conservation and Restoration Program and State Wildlife Grants program since FY 2001 • States/Territories had to submit Strategies to U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service by October 1, 2005 to continue receiving funds; all did! • Tasked by former Secretary Murphy after the 2003 Virginia Natural Resources Leadership Summit to “Develop a Comprehensive Wildlife Conservation Plan by 2005”

  3. What Does It Mean For Virginia? • A strategy and common vision for conservation for the Commonwealth, not just DGIF • Status check of Virginia’s wildlife & habitats • In line with Roadmap for Virginia’s Future (Virginia’s long-term strategic plan): “Protect, conserve, and wisely develop our natural, historical and cultural resources” • Can be used to prioritize and leveragefunding across agencies and programswithin and outside of Virginia government

  4. Wildlife Action Plan Overview • A wildlife conservation plan for the Commonwealth, not just DGIF • Developed with input from multiple partners, stakeholders, and citizens • Plan evaluates and assesses: • Location and abundance of wildlife and habitats • Problems facing species and habitats • Conservation actions to address problems • Research and monitoring needs

  5. US Fish & Wildlife Service US Forest Service VA Dept. of Conservation & Recreation VA Dept. of Transportation VA Assoc. of Planning District Commissions Natural Resource Conservation Service Western Virginia Land Trust The Nature Conservancy National Park Service VA Dept. of Agriculture & Consumer Services Virginia Audubon Ducks Unlimited US Dept. of Defense VA Dept. of Forestry External Steering Committee

  6. Key Outcomes

  7. Species of Greatest Conservation Need • Final List: 925 species • Assigned to one of four tiers of relative conservation need • Reviewed and endorsed by scientists and stakeholders Tiers and associated species served as the foundation for Plan development, including setting conservation priorities and actions.

  8. Species of Greatest Conservation Need Mammals 24 Birds 96 Fishes 97 Reptiles 28 Amphibians 32 Mussels 61 Aquatic crustaceans 61 Aquatic insects 148 Terrestrial insects 142 Other aquatic invertebrates 34 Other terrestrial invertebrates 202 70% are invertebrates; 60% are aquatic

  9. Habitat Assessment • Broad Habitat Assessment • Statewide terrestrial, aquatic, and subterranean habitats, their locations, and their condition • Species of Greatest Conservation Need (SGCN) Habitat Assessment • Identified general habitat needs for all SGCN species • Created detailed maps ofTier I species habitatsmodeled from best availableinformation

  10. Conservation Opportunities

  11. Human Population Density(from 2000 census block groups)

  12. Predicted % Change in Population(from 2000 to 2009)

  13. High Impact Growth Areas

  14. Problems Facing Wildlife • Greatest threats to terrestrial species state-wide are related to habitat destruction or fragmentation, including development and some agricultural and forestry practices. • Greatest threats to aquatic species state-wide are related to water and habitat quality, including pollution and sedimentation, from development and some industrial, agricultural, and forestry practices.

  15. Transportation Challenges • Habitat fragmentation • Habitat destruction • Hydrologic regime change (impervious surfaces) • Inadequate land use planning • Organic pollutants, other toxics • Hydrologic regime change

  16. Conservation Actions • Coordination • Improve coordination between law enforcement entities • Education and Outreach • Educate local planners & developers • Enforcement • Improve enforcement & prosecution of wildlife laws • Habitat Management • Increase participation in and rates of use of BMPs • Land Protection • Continue or improve conservation easement programs • Planning • Improve land use planning in urban, forestry, ag uses • Regulations, Policy and Law • Establish permanent dedicated funding for conservation • Species Management • Control overabundant native species, exotic/invasive species

  17. Transportation-Related Conservation Actions • Better local and regional land use planning, including sustainable development • Removal or alteration of impediments to fish movement • Wildlife crossings • Replace wooden bridges • Reduce salt application to roadways

  18. How Will We All Get It Done? Implementation, Coordination, Planning Committee Information & MonitoringWorking Group Sub-Committees Education, Outreach & Partnerships Species Management Policy, Enforcement,Regulation & Law Habitat Management& Protection

  19. Act Now! Find Your Nichein the Wildlife Action Plan! www.vawildlifestrategies.org

More Related