The Florida Wildlife Corridor: Archbold Biological Station important partner in science and conservation

Similar documents
Wilderness Hero #2 Margaret (Mardy) Murie

Fundraising Training. WTA Board Retreat October 24, Washington Trails Association 1

Green Legacy. Securing our. Greenlands Strategy

Wilds. Headwaters. Lakes. Oxbows. Falls

Proposal to Redevelop Lower Kananaskis River-Barrier Lake. Bow Valley Provincial Park

Cross Florida Beach to Beach Adventure Bicycle Route

Crown of the Continent Ecosystem The Glacier-Great Bear Connectivity Conservation Area Briefing

Galveston Bay Estuary Program. Carla G. Guthrie, Ph.D. Galveston Bay Council Member Texas Water Development Board

proof Northwest District

A Guide To The Wilderness Waterway Of The Everglades National Park By William G. Truesdell

TAKING TO THE SKIES. Town Center s Aviation Park Phase II Educational and Historical Installation Program.

Proposal to Redevelop Lower Kananaskis River-Barrier Lake. Bow Valley Provincial Park. Frequently Asked Questions

Trail Information. New Maps in Multiple Formats. In 2017, the Pacific Northwest Trail Association developed an entirely new mapset for

TANZANIA WILDLIFE & COMMUNITY CONSERVATION WINTER COURSE

Archbold Biological Station Ecology Summer Camp 2015

National parks WRITING

Dixon Trail Construction - From the Top of the Mountain 2016 Interim Report Friends of Cheyenne Mountain State Park September 2 nd, 2016

Kayaking the St. Johns River. Questions? Comments? Contact Pete Corradino Vice Chair of Florida SEE

EVERYTHING IN ORDER (OF THE ARROW) EDITION

These expenses are mainly on gear, vehicles, trips, travel-related expenses and more.

WILD WYOMING: A SCIENTIFIC ADVENTURE JUNE 21-30, 2019

Pinellas County Environmental Lands

WELCOME TO OUR WORLD

Hatchet and Weogufka Creeks Treasures of Coosa County. Roger Vines County Extension Coordinator

The Caribbean Marine Protected Managers Network and Forum (CaMPAM) M ENTO RSH I P PRO G RAM MENTOR BIOGRAPHIES

Friends of Kissimmee Prairie Preserve State Park meeting. April 16, 2016 APPROVED MINUTES

ROCKY MOUNTAIN WILD S SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITIES

Mission. Purpose. Idaho Trails Association promotes the continued enjoyment of Idaho s hiking trails.

The Summits of Canada Expedition Information and Education Summary

Our Mission: Our Goals:

PORT DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES & SUCCESS STORIES. PORTMIAMI AN EVOLVING GATEWAY Juan M. Kuryla, PPM PortMiami Director and CEO

Florida s Most Remarkable Beach Resort. Jacoby D E V E L O P M E N T

hudsonriverpark.org 2017 Brand Activation and Partnership Opportunities

Proposal to Redevelop Lower Kananaskis Lake Campgrounds in Peter Lougheed Provincial Park. What We Heard

THE A TEAM. Megan Walters, Becky D Antuono, Kristin Wilson, Dan Fitzpatrick

daily maintenance and management of the park. This 1.3 mile section of the Brooklyn

CENTERVILLE HS CHOIR BEN SPALDING, DIRECTOR DESTINATION: ORLANDO, FLORIDA DATES: NOVEMBER 18-24, 2018

Underwater Acoustic Monitoring in US National Parks

Northeast Quadrant Distinctive Features

THE FLORIDA TRAIL ASSOCIATION. Congressional Report. Trail Operations Report

BOONE COUNTY PLANNING COMMISSION A G E N D A Tuesday, August 15, 2017 Boone County Board Room 1212 Logan Ave Belvidere IL :00 PM

Creating a community for aspiring expats

January 14, Orange County Transportation Authority Attn: M2 NCCP/HCP 550 South Main Street P.O. Box Orange, CA

Land Use. Grasslands and Rangelands National Parks and Reserves. Thursday, October 9, 14

2018 National Convention Sponsor and Exhibitor Prospectus. July 3-8, Rosen Shingle Creek 9939 Universal Boulevard Orlando, Florida 32819

LIFETIME SERVICE AWARD NOMINEE SAM H. POWELL

Proposed Scotchman Peaks Wilderness Act 2016 (S.3531)

Exploring State Water Trail Programs

in Peru MENU By Lauren Jade Hill Founder of Inkaterra José Koechlin has been on an extraordinary journey in his efforts to establish

Mosaic Reclaiming the land for future generations

Itinerary Overview. Continental Divide Alpine Backpacking 22 days Ages Course Description

ARCHIVES MONTH in Washington!

Internship Announcement. Mount Rainier National Park. NPS Academy Internships 6 Positions. Please Respond By April 15, 2019

STONE MOUNTAIN PROVINCIAL PARK Purpose Statement and Zoning Plan

Antarctic Express: Cruise South, Fly North

WYOMING HS BAND, CHOIR & ORCHESTRA CHRIS DEWITT, BRIAN POTTS & LAURA COOMER, DIRECTORS DESTINATION: ORLANDO, FLORIDA DATES: FEBRUARY 10-15, 2016

BURGES JAMES GADSDEN PROVINCIAL PARK PURPOSE STATEMENT AND ZONING PLAN

Ritz-Carlton Orlando, Grande lakes.

Georgia s Brain Wrinkles. SS8G1c

Outdoor Convenings Fall 2015

Itinerary Overview. Sawatch Range Mountaineering Ages days

$850,000 Awarded to 20 Organizations

MARBLE RIVER PROVINCIAL PARK

MILLIGAN HILLS PROVINCIAL PARK

") 115 ") 108 ") 121 ") 119 ") 217

THE AIRPORT Situated on approximately 3,000 acres, Orlando Sanford International Airport (SFB) boasts the finest leisure passenger facilities in the

Internship Announcement. Mount Rainier National Park. NPS Academy Internships 6 Positions. Please Respond By March 1, 2019

AWESOME! The Summer of. The Y. Creating awesome summers for 160 years! UNPLUG. EXPLORE. GO! For ages 5-16.

The Heritage Hunters Evaluation Report. April 2016

SCA and ICU International Parks Program

Air Transport Association of Canada

The Partnership Wild & Scenic Rivers Program

April 10, Mark Stiles San Juan Public Lands Center Manager 15 Burnett Court Durango, CO Dear Mark,

The Vision for the San Juan Islands Scenic Byway

EGA S 2016 RETREAT FIELD TRIPS & EXCURSIONS

SPARTA Finding treasures off the beaten path just got a lot easier.

Mr. Chairman, Members of the Committee, I am Chet Fuller, President GE Aviation

Roduner Ranch FOR SALE. 5,878± Acres Potential Development Land. Merced County, California. Offices Serving The Central Valley

Land O Lakes, FL Vacant Land for Commercial Development

Itinerary Overview and Travel Information: 15-Day Alaska Alpine Backpacking Course for Adults

Canada Rocky Mountain Adventure Into the Wild

SPONSORSHIP OPPORTUNITIES WHALE TALES Hawaii s Premier Whale Research and Education Event FEBRUARY THE RITZ-CARLTON, KAPALUA FEBRUARY 19

Volunteer Trail Builders on NC s Mountains-to-Sea Trail. Kate Dixon Executive Director Friends of the Mountains-to-Sea Trail

The Chu property is a 6.57 acre parcel located in the Town of Superior on the west side of McCaslin Boulevard. In 2014, the Town of Superior acquired

Port of Seattle Sea-Tac Airport Master Plan An Economic Engine for Washington State. Kurt Beckett Deputy Chief Executive Officer

Silver-washed Fritillaries in the Straits Inclosure in July

The Pearl of Africa: A Survey of Uganda's National Parks

Wool Ranch 20 Acres 20 +/- acres Sunol, CA Alameda County

The Mountain Workshop Difference

Bon Portage Island Conservation Campaign

Trail Guide. The Nunckatessett Greenway. Wildlands Trust. AmeriCorps MassLIFT. Bridgewater, MA & West Bridgewater, MA

16.9M Visitors V i s i t e d

EGA S 2016 RETREAT FIELD TRIPS & EXCURSIONS

Everything I was I carry with me, everything I will be lies waiting on the road ahead. Dispatch from CDT KICK OFF

YMCA CAMP HANES WHERE FUN COMES NATURALLY.

Sunrise Ranch 6890 acres, Jeff Davis County, Texas On the Fort Davis Scenic Loop

MIDDLE SCHOOL CURRICULUM TR AILING ICE AGE M YST ERI E S ICE AGE TREKKING

MAP KEY. BLACK CIRCLES: Our 3 trip destinations of Tulum, Progreso, and Hacienda Temozon in Merida.

RHINOS WITHOUT BORDERS

ABOUT THE PARKS NANTAHALA NATIONAL FOREST MOUNTAINS NATIONAL PARK CHEROKEE NATIONAL FOREST PISGAH NATIONAL FOREST GREAT SMOKY HIKING TRAILS

Transcription:

To: Highlands News-Sun From: Archbold Biological Station Published: May 4, 2018 Author: Archbold Biological Station The Florida Wildlife Corridor: Archbold Biological Station important partner in science and conservation The Florida Wildlife Corridor team has just completed its third expedition. Unlike the team's first two 1,000-mile expeditions Everglades to Okefenokee in 2012 and Glades to Gulf in 2015 which took 100 days and 70 days respectively, this recent Heartland to Headwaters adventure was a mini-trek lasting just one week, from April 15-22. Cheering on the team at their kick-off event were Archbold board members and staff. Archbold has been an important science and conservation partner for the Corridor since the beginning. Carlton Ward Jr. one of the Florida Wildlife Corridor leaders, was at Archbold when he first got the idea for the Corridor expeditions remembers Dr. Hilary Swain, Executive Director at Archbold. Carlton, a well-known conservation photographer, was at the Station attending a symposium on regional Black Bear biology. He became intrigued by the GPS collar data tracking male bears traveling hundreds of miles across the state, successfully using the patchwork of green spaces and intervening wildlife corridors made up of private and public lands. Joe Guthrie, a University of Kentucky graduate student and biologist on the Black Bear project who was working at Archbold at the time, talked about how highways like US 27 and I-4 were major obstacles for bears. Sitting in the back of the room, amazed by how little the public knew or understood about bear and panther movements in Florida, Carlton had his 'light-bulb moment'. His idea to mount a 'human-powered' expedition, literally following in the path of bears and other large animals like panthers derived from scientific data, and to share the human stories

from these expeditions to inform and inspire the public about the need for broad swaths of land connecting Florida's green spaces. Ward recruited Joe Guthrie and fellow conservationist Mallory Lykes Dimmitt to round out the expedition team. Together, they pored over Archbold s computer mapping data and planned their route for the first expedition in 2012. They started in Everglades National Park and, after one thousand miles and one hundred days of hiking, biking, riding, paddle boarding, and kayaking, they ended in Okefenokee National Park in Georgia. Two of those 2012 expedition days were spent at Archbold. Three years later in 2015, their second expedition completed another epic 1,000-mile journey, one that took them from just south of Orlando and around Florida's Forgotten Coast to the Alabama border. In 2018, there wasn't time for a full-blown expedition so the Florida Wildlife Corridor team decided on a shorter journey, but one with huge corridor significance. All of their expeditions have highlighted the need to protect an interconnected statewide wildlife corridor, but for 2018 the team decided "to navigate and document a critical chokepoint of the Corridor that can possibly still be saved." They focused on the need to protect lands west of Orlando, the last remaining patches of green here that connect north and south Florida. And they highlighted where more wildlife crossings are needed in this section under I-4 to allow assist the large animals that move north from Highlands County, in the headwaters of the Everglades, and have to cross I-4 on their way to the Green Swamp and back again. Archbold continues to be excited about its long association with the Florida Wildlife Corridor, ever since the moment of inception. Three Archbold board members, Chairman Mary Hufty, Lela Love, and Vevie Lykes Dimmitt were present for the celebratory kick-off launch of the 2018 Heartland to Headwaters: Corridor at a Crossroads which was launched from The Nature Conservancy's Disney Wilderness Preserve in Kissimmee. They were accompanied by Executive Director Hilary Swain, Education Coordinator Dustin Angell, Research Assistant Emily Angell, and Development Director Deborah Pollard. A week later Vevie Dimmitt and Hilary Swain were also present at Little Everglades Ranch near Dade City, to greet the team at the end of their trip. The expeditioners looked exhausted but exhilarated to have completed their adventure. Mallory Dimmitt described their first few days as "very heavy-going, through lands that had not been managed for decades, presenting some the most difficult, impenetrable hiking they had experienced on any expedition." Trailing gallantly in their wake was the Grizzly Creek film crew with the added challenge of carrying their heavy equipment through the dense thickets. Lindsay Cross, executive director of the Florida Wildlife Corridor explains its mission and methods: Using a science-based approach, on-the-ground knowledge of the Corridor, and the support of thousands of followers throughout the state and nation, the Florida Wildlife

Corridor now embarks on its most important journey to accelerate the rate of conservation in Florida by 10% annually in order to protect 300,000 acres within the Corridor by the end of 2020. Archbold's research, conducted on multiple sites throughout the Corridor, have made it a vital Corridor partner. Swain explains, Our science drives conservation action by providing long-term data and significant results to conservation organizations such as the Florida Wildlife Corridor. In addition, the 20,000 acres managed by Archbold, including scrub habitats of the Station and the grasslands of Buck Island Ranch, are a critical part of the Corridor, connecting some of Florida's most precious conservation lands. The Florida Wildlife Corridor has been such a successful strategy for engaging Floridians with conservation and to promote wildlife connectivity. Two films and two books from the first and the second expeditions attracted attention from National Geographic, PBS and news outlets throughout the state and beyond. The Corridor has expansive and fully engaged social media outreach. Perhaps their most impressive feat has been creating dozens of new partnerships throughout Florida, including agencies, policy makers, businesses, conservation groups, foundations, and ranching families. Look out for new videos and articles coming from this third expedition. Their Florida Wildlife Corridor expeditions are this upcoming generation's epic Florida adventures. Their voices, echoing from the swamps and woodlands across this state, are a riveting call to action. Photo 1: Archbold staff and board members joined with other supporters of the Florida Wildlife Corridor for the expedition kickoff event last month. Photo by Alex Morrison.

Photo 2: Florida Wildlife Corridor expeditioners Mallory Lykes Dimmitt (left), Joe Guthrie (middle), and Carlton Ward (right) at the expedition kickoff event. Photo by Dustin Angell. Photo 3: Carlton Ward visited Buck Island Ranch last fall to photograph some of the research projects on site. Here he takes a break and chats with interns Jaide Allenbrand (left) and Avarna Jain (middle). Photo by Dustin Angell.

Photo 4: Carlton Ward at work photographing wildlife research on Buck Island Ranch, a conservation easement site, and a part of the Florida Wildlife Corridor. Photo by Dustin Angell.