Be a Strong Voice for Nature’s Bottom Line by Becoming a Conservation Advocate
By Matt Clark
Tucson Audubon Conservation Advocate
Tucson Audubon Conservation Advocate
Help us to grow the
power of our collective voice for the conservation of birds, other wildlife and
their habitats in southeast Arizona. We need your voice to amplify
Tucson Audubon’s positions and recommendations to our elected leaders and
decision makers. We have made it easy to do!
Check out our Conservation Action Alert web page for information and targeted actions on
current issues we are working on in conjunction with our partner organizations:
http://www.tucsonaudubon.org/act-now
City-County
Cooperation Saves Saguaro-studded Painted Hills
The Arizona
Daily Star recently published an opinion editorial written by Pima County Board of
Supervisor Richard Elias and City Councilor Regina Romero celebrating our
community’s newest conservation success story: the preservation of Painted
Hills. In their editorial, the two
community leaders say, “The saguaro-studded Painted Hills at the gateway to
Tucson Mountain Park finally is getting the protection it has long deserved,
due in large part to years of cooperative efforts between Pima County and the City
of Tucson. City and county officials worked hard and in concert to achieve this
milestone, as neither entity could have done it alone.”
The Pima
County Board of Supervisors on Monday approved a $7.5 million agreement to
purchase the 287 pristine acres that make up the striking Painted Hills between
West Speedway and West Anklam Road, using bond funds that the Tucson City
Council allocated for a $3 million down payment. The willing seller is the Dallas
Police and Fire Retirement System. A less preservation-minded Board of
Supervisors in the 1960s had zoned the acreage for residential development, but
the ravine-laced rocky crags of the Painted Hills repeatedly defied development
efforts. Pima County and city voters approved open space bonds to purchase
Painted Hills in 1997 and again in 2004.”
The funding for the purchase of Painted hills was levied specifically
for Community Open Space acquisitions.
Tucson
Audubon commends the both the City and County for their efforts to purchase and
preserve Painted Hills. Representatives from Tucson Audubon and the Coalition
for Sonoran Desert Protection, of which Tucson Audubon is a founding member
group, have attended many meetings over the past decade in support of
preserving this special parcel of land. Now we can celebrate this long-awaited
conservation achievement!
With an
estimated 9,000 saguaros,
Painted Hills has abundant wildlife, wash corridors, peaks and ridges of scenic
value and lush upland desert habitat. It is directly adjacent to the proposed
Tucson Mountain Area Important Bird Area, and is an excellent addition to the
iconic Tucson Mountain Park. The Painted Hills property will provide excellent
recreational opportunities for Tucson citizens and out of town visitors for
generations to come and is a good investment for our community. Painted Hills
is exactly the type of open space purchase that the 2004 Community Open Space
Bond was passed by voters to purchase and protect, and directly supports the
implementation of the visionary Sonoran Desert Conservation Plan.
Call or
email your County Supervisor and City Council Representative to thank them for
their leadership, collaboration and commitment to preserving Painted Hills.
Also, we
encourage you to write to the Pima County
Bond Advisory Committee and tell them you support the next open space bond
package to be as fully funded as possible so that conservation success stories
like Painted Hills can continue to be possible. Click here to read more and to learn
how you can take action to support the future of open space preservation in
Pima County.
Solar, Wind and Wildlife
– Can We Strike a Balance?
The
conservation community has been actively engaged in tackling the growing threat
posed to birds, bats and other wildlife by the development and operation of many
new utility scale wind and solar installations. The rapid growth of these new
forms of energy production has resulted in efforts by the government and the
public to craft new policies in order to strike a balance between renewable
energy development and the conservation of wildlife and other natural and
cultural resources.
In recent
news, North American Windpower recently reported that on July 31st, the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) issued the first ever eagle take permit
for EDF Renewable Energy’s Shiloh IV wind project in Solano, California. The
article also notes that a public process is now underway by
the FWS to retool eagle take permit polices. Tucson Audubon will be reviewing the proposed revisions
to the Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act permit regulations. The final
policy governing take permits, including the maximum length of time permits can
be issued, is expected to be finalized by the end of 2015.
Meanwhile,
things are heating up in the Mojave Desert of California, where birds are being
scorched out of the sky by the new Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating System
(ISEGS). Read the Arizona Daily Star article on the issue. The project is currently the largest
solar thermal power plant in the world. What is being done to avoid, minimize
and mitigate impacts to our wildlife from energy development? Visit the and American Bird Conservancy and Defenders of Wildlife’s websites to learn more about the
issues and how we can get engaged.
Outdoor Cat Suspected
of Killing 5 Endangered Lesser Long-Nosed Bats
Recently, in nearby
Cochise County, three endangered Lesser Long-Nosed bat carcasses were collected
from a mortality event of five bats found under a hummingbird feeder over
several days. According to the USGS National Wildlife Health Center diagnostic
report, “All three bats had evidence of bite wounds resulting in death; bite
wounds were small and deeply penetrating, consistent with a small carnivore
such as a cat.” While this case is not yet definitive, cat-caused mortality
events such as this may be occurring much more often than we realize because
the vast majority of them likely go undocumented.
Scientists from the
Smithsonian Conservation Biology Institute and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
recently estimated that outdoor cats kill an astounding 1.4 to 3.7 billion
birds and 6.9 to 20.7 billion mammals in the United States annually. Even well-fed cats instinctively kill birds
and other small animals. Therefore, developing public policies governing the
management of outdoor cats that are informed and responsive to the best
available science is crucial to addressing this growing problem.
Tucson Audubon is
disappointed in the recent Pima County Board of Supervisors approval of a trap,
neuter and release (TNR) program for feral cats. We believe it was the wrong decision for
biodiversity and for the health and human safety of Pima County residents.
Although the TNR program will undoubtedly reduce feral cat euthanasia and
intakes into shelters, there is no credible evidence that it will actually
reduce the number of feral cats in the environment. If the newly adopted TNR
program does not significantly reduce the number of feral cats on our streets
and in our local natural areas, it will be a failure.
In addition to many
common species outdoor cats kill, a few examples among special status species that
outdoor cats may be putting at risk of further endangerment in Pima County
include the Southwest Willow flycatcher (Empidonax
traillii extimus), the Western yellow-billed cuckoo (Coccyzus americanus), Mountain Plover (Charadrius montanus) and the Lesser Long-Nosed bat
(Leptonycteris curasoae yerbabuenae).
In light of the
decision to adopt the “Community Cats” TNR program, Tucson Audubon is asking
Pima County to take reasonable steps to document the performance of the program
and to avoid some of the pitfalls of other TNR programs. We are asking that
Pima County: 1) fund an independent study of the feral cat population in the
zip codes affected by the program, before, during and after the three-year
program; 2) not allow cat colonies near several key locations for birds and
bats that are within the project area; 3) listen and respond favorably to
people who don’t want cat colonies near them or their property; 4) not allow
cat colonies near The Loop or other bicycle routes in order to assure the
safety of cyclists; 5) abandon the current TNR program if it fails to reduce
feral cat populations over the three year period for which it is funded; 6) partner
with Tucson Audubon and the American Bird Conservancy to educate people about
the benefits of keeping cats indoors; and to 7) consider adopting and funding
other approaches and solutions, such as developing a more robust adoption
program, and creating a larger county-operated no-kill facility for cats that
are deemed unsuitable for adoption. Click here to learn more and take action!
Twin Mining Pollution
Disasters Remind the Public and Policy Makers of the Industry’s Many
Environmental Hazards
Two recent major
mining-related pollution disasters are a stark reminder of the many serious
environmental hazards posed by the hard rock mining industry, which
unfortunately aims to build new open pit mines in both the Santa Rita and
Patagonia Mountains of southeast Arizona.
The first disaster
occurred near Mount Polley in the Cariboo region of British Columbia, Canada. According to Wikipedia, “the disaster began in the early
morning of August 4, 2014 when the Mount Polley tailings pond partially
breached, releasing 10 million cubic meters of water and 4.5 million cubic
meters of slurry into Polley Lake. The contaminated slurry carrying felled
trees, mud and debris "scoured away the banks" of Hazeltine Creek
which flows out of Polley Lake and continued into the nearby Quesnel Lake. The
spill caused Polley Lake to rise by 1.5 meters (4.9 ft). Hazeltine
Creek was transformed from a 2-metre-wide (6.6 ft) stream to a 50-meter-across
(160 ft) "wasteland." Cariboo Creek was also
affected. The spill has been called one of the biggest environmental disasters
in modern Canadian history” The mining disaster has begun a conversation about
ways such disasters might be avoided in the future, like in this article in the online magazine The Tyee.
The second disaster occurred
at the Buenavista copper mine in Cananea, Sonora, Mexico. According to a Mexico
News Daily report, “The mine spilled 40,000 cubic meters of copper sulphate acid solution
into the Sonora and Bacanuchi rivers on August 6, leaving some 22,000 people
without drinking water in as many as seven area municipalities. The National
Water Commission has issued a prohibition against contact with the water due to
unsafe levels of arsenic, cadmium, copper, chrome and mercury. The
environmental protection agency is expected to conclude its investigation into
the spill this week and decide on what sanctions will be imposed on the mine’s
owner.”
This twin set of
mining disasters in our neighboring countries is a wake-up call for us too. Southern
Arizona now faces numerous large-scale mining proposals in ecologically
sensitive areas such as the Santa Rita and Patagonia Mountains. Not only would such mining cause extensive
habitat loss and fragmentation, they would also put our community’s water and
air quality at risk.
The majority of these
two adjacent “sky island” mountain ranges are publicly owned land, managed in
trust by the Coronado National Forest. These sky islands harbor impressive
endemic biological diversity – and are a birding hotspot that is a major
economic draw to the area. Both the ecology and economy of the region are
threatened by several large-scale mineral mining proposals from foreign-owned
companies. Efforts to stop these disastrous proposals from becoming a reality
are hampered by the antiquated Mining Act of 1872. Legislative attempts to
reform and modernize this law have been obstructed by powerful pro-mining
lobbies. New legislation has been introduced that would better address the
environmental and societal impacts caused by modern mining operations.
Tucson Audubon is
working in partnership with organizations like the Patagonia Area Resource Alliance, Save the
Scenic Santa Ritas and Earthworks to prevent these potentially disastrous mining proposals from becoming a
reality and to build a constituency to demand that our government modernize its
mining laws. Click here to learn more and take action!
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