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Beyond the Boundaries. Forging Partnerships to Conserve Refuge Landscapes. Beyond the Boundaries. Basic Principle: Refuges in the Lower 48 are too small to fully achieve their conservation goals
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Beyond the Boundaries Forging Partnerships to Conserve Refuge Landscapes
Beyond the Boundaries Basic Principle: • Refuges in the Lower 48 are too small to fully achieve their conservation goals • 2005 State of the System Report made the case that refuges need to function as part of a larger ecosystem - threats of development, invasive species • This principle has gained great currency in the context of climate change, Strategic Habitat Conservation framework, new LCCs • Refuges play a key anchor role - protecting both habitat and natural infrastructure
Beyond the Boundaries If: Some of the keys to wildlife adaptation are connectivity and the 3 Rs - representation, redundancy and resiliency…. Then: Our goal is to help refuges play a proactive, catalytic role in collaborative landscape scale conservation efforts - protecting, enhancing and expanding the Refuge System This requires vision, relationships, strategy, creativity and determination And this is where Friends come in: Putting the concepts into action
Beyond the Boundaries • Identifying threats and opportunities for conservation adjacent to refuges • Building and expanding constituencies for Refuges and other FWS programs through Friends Groups and partnerships • Developing multiple sources, of financial support, both public and private • Setting a proactive rather than reactive agenda
Beyond the Boundaries • Work with Refuge Manager to identify threats, needs and opportunities, and the right role for both Refuge and Friends • Who are the partners - finding common goals among many different constituencies • Coordinating among FWS and other agency programs - ES, Park Service, Natural Resource Conservation Service, NOAA -- especially with new climate change adaptation programs • Typical components: Land Conservation, Habitat Restoration, Advocacy/Political Strategy, Visitor Services and Outreach, Funding - federal, local, private • NWRA Criteria: transferable models, national issues, critical resources, refuge and regional support, funding feasibility
Beyond the Boundaries What Can Friends Do? • Leadership: Work in partnership with Refuge Manager • Relationships: Ambassadors within the community • Eyes and Ears: Identify threats and opportunities - development plans, adjacent landowners selling, water issues • Build Bridges - local/regional initiatives that refuge could join, outreach to local officials and boards, bringing groups together • Help fill gaps - citizen science for climate change • Advocacy, Fundraising, Friend-raising • Help think ahead
Beyond the Boundaries • NWRA’s Current Focus Areas: • Southern Nevada - Desert Complex • Florida - Chassahowitzka Complex - Crystal River NWR • Lower Mississippi NWRs - Cache River (AR), Tensas (LA), TR Complex (MS), Atchafalaya (LA) • Oregon Coastal NWR Complex • Wisconsin - Horicon Marsh NWR • DelMarVa Peninsula - Blackwater NWR • Connecticut River Watershed/New England - Silvio Conte NFWR • Bear River Watershed, UT, WY, ID • Montana Prairie - Charles M. Russell NWR
Chassahowitzka NWR ComplexCrystal River NWR, Florida • Partnership with Friends of Chazz • Key property, threat of development • Needed leadership and strategy • Partner Coordination • Facilitating management and visitor services plans • Fundraising
Threats and Opportunities • Protect five springs • Guide public use • Build better community • relations • Improve water quality • Restore wetlands • Expand the Refuge
Many Goals, Many Partners • Land Acquisition - Conservation Fund • Wetland Restoration - SW FL Water Management District • Visitor Services Plan - Friends, FWS, NWRA • Advocacy - Friends and NWRA • Fundraising - Friends, City, State, County, FWS, NWRA, private
Partnership! Partnership! Partnership! The Conservation Fund America’s Conservation Partner
Innovative Funding Strategies • Carbon Sequestration • Ecosystem Services Investments • Credit Markets • Mix with traditional sources such as LWCF, • Migratory Bird, NAWCA, Section 6
Implement • Land acquisition, ecosystem service assessments and community outreach at Cache River • Explore Tensas boundary expansion • Friends capacity building and and acquisition at TR Complex • Develop ecosystem services project model
Bear River Watershed • River and watershed spans three states and links three refuges - developing potential conservation easement program • Working with Bear River refuge and Friends Group to develop watershed education program • Supporting land acquisition and easement projects
Bear River Watershed • Cokeville Meadows NWR • Bear Lake NWR • Bear River Migratory Bird Refuge