Eric Stiles
Vice President for Conservation & Stewardship
March, 2003
Shorebird/Horseshoe Crab Conservation
Campaign Update
New Jersey Audubon Society continues to work aggressively
with its partners to halt the harvest of horseshoe crabs from
the Delaware Bay population as bait. As reported in previous
issues, the harvest of crabs threatens to topple the food supply
for nearly one million shorebirds using the Delaware Bay as a
spring stopover. Underscoring this point, world-leading
ornithologists from four continents have written the Governors
of Delaware and New Jersey calling for a moratorium on the bait
harvest of horseshoe crabs.
The conservation campaign has taken our coalition to both
sides of the Delaware Bay for numerous press conferences,
hearings and meetings. Letters, phone calls and e-mails from
our members and the public have been critical to the campaign.
The tenor of the policy debate has shifted noticeably as the
result of our collective efforts. The regulatory agencies are
now asking “What should be done?” instead of “Do we have enough
information to act?”. We must continue to hold the Governors of
New Jersey and Delaware accountable on this issue.
Our coalition has been steadfast in its call for a bay-wide
moratorium on horseshoe crab harvest and a reasonable economic
displacement package for the impacted fisheries. Government
failure to take appropriate measures could result in litigation
from the conservation community. Any horseshoe crab management
proposal must guarantee an adequate food supply for the
shorebirds and a viable horseshoe crab population.
Our coalition has also launched an effort to list the Red
Knot as a federal endangered species. Recent research indicates
that the Red Knot rufa subspecies, which migrates through the
Delaware Bay, may become extinct by 2010. This alarming finding
mandates more robust protection afforded through the federal
Endangered Species Act.
Stone Harbor Point –Piping Plovers
Protected
New Jersey Audubon Society and American Littoral Society have
been working with state and federal agencies to protect Piping
Plover (federally threatened) habitat at Stone Harbor Point. In
2002, six pairs of this beautiful shorebird nested on the
Point. Their habitat was threatened by Stone Harbor’s alleged
failure to adhere to an Army Corps of Engineers (ACOE) permit
regarding silt deposition onsite. The permit called for the
dredge materials to be tested for contaminants and consist of
sand, upon which Piping Plovers nest.
The town of Stone Harbor instead created a huge impoundment
of primarily muck on the Point which is not viable habitat for
nesting plovers. On January 8, the United States Attorney’s
Office filed suit against Stone Harbor for failing to comply
with its ACOE permit which threatened the critical Piping Plover
habitat. A settlement was reached on February 11 calling for
the town to relocate the silt by March 31 and create 4.4
additional acres of plover nesting habitat.
The settlement, if adhered to, is a home run for this
endangered beach-nesting bird species. More information on
Piping Plovers can be found at
http://endangered.fws.gov/i/B69.html.
Cerulean Warbler
NJ Audubon Society is supporting a petition to list the
Cerulean Warbler as a federally threatened species. This
brilliant blue wood warbler has declined by over 60% in the
northeast United States from 1966-2000. In 2000, only 157 pairs
remained in New Jersey.
The decline in Cerulean Warbler populations is due to the
loss or fragmentation of forested habitat in the warbler's
summer breeding areas (forests of the Eastern United States).
The warbler's forested wintering areas in the Andes Mountains of
South America have also been destroyed and severely fragmented.
Numerous studies have shown that Cerulean Warblers are an
area-sensitive species, requiring large, contiguous forests that
are thousands of acres in size.
Federal endangered species listing, unlike New Jersey state
listing, protects a species’ critical habitat which will be
essential to the Cerulean Warbler’s survival.
Surface Water Quality Standards
Regulations to Help Protect Endangered Species
Commissioner Brad Campbell of the NJ Department of
Environmental Protection has proposed new rules under Surface
Water Quality Standards Act. The regulations will help protect
human health and endangered species through creating new
contaminants standards and protecting habitat associated with
waterways.
Under the new rules, the Commissioner has proposed adding 15
waterways as “C1 waterways”, which would be protected from any
future degradation in water quality. The waterways including 9
reservoirs and 6 streams provide critical habitat to many state
threatened and endangered species, including the Bald Eagle
(state endangered). These regulations demonstrate that water
supply protection and wildlife conservation are integrally
linked.
Proposed State Stormwater Regulations
Helps Protect Habitat and Water
Under Commissioner Brad Campbell, the New Jersey Department
of Environmental Protection has proposed new regulations for
stormwater management. These proposals appear to be courageous
and necessary steps in the defense of the state’s threatened
aquatic resources and habitat. Developers are quickly consuming
the remaining open space lands in New Jersey, and the previous
rules enacted in 1983 did little to enforce smart growth.
The new rules require developers to improve the quality and
reduce the quantity of stormwater runoff resulting from new
structures and landscaping. Forms of “impervious cover,” like
asphalt and concrete, will be limited. Likewise, developers
will be discouraged from creating large lawns at the cost of
important forest and wetland habitats. The state will promote a
manual of best management practices that demonstrates
environmentally conscious ways of designing new properties which
will better protect our natural resources.
Recent construction encroaches on waterways that supply the
drinking water for many, if not the majority, of people in the
state. The new regulations will create a 300-foot buffer along
C1 water bodies that protects the purity of these necessary
water sources. This buffer will also shelter many rare,
threatened and endangered species for which these waterways
represent the last available habitat.
NJ Audubon Defends Freshwater Wetlands
Rules
Through litigation, the New Jersey Builders Association (NJBA)
is challenging new rules adopted by the state which utilize the
Landscape Project to better delineate wetlands containing state
threatened and endangered species. We have reported extensively
about the Landscape Project in previous magazine issues. It
represents a new, revolutionary tool to identify critical
habitat for rare, threatened and endangered species. NJ Audubon
is being represented by the Rutgers Environmental Law Clinic in
defense of these innovative regulations.
The rules are being touted by the environmental community as
a huge stride forward in safeguarding our natural resources.
NJBA’s effort is simply another veiled attempt to derail Smart
Growth and resource conservation. NJ Audubon refuses to allow
this theft of our natural heritage!
Cats Indoors! Campaign Launched in New
Jersey
American Bird Conservancy (http://www.abcbirds.org)
has asked New Jersey Audubon Society to launch a Cats Indoors!
Campaign in New Jersey. Each year domestic and feral cats kill
hundreds of millions of birds and billions of small mammals in
the U.S.
Cats Indoors! - The Campaign for Safer Birds and Cats - was
initiated by ABC to end the unnecessary suffering and death of
birds and other wildlife caused by free-roaming domestic cats.
Cats Indoors! seeks to educate cat owners, decision makers and
the general public that free-roaming cats pose a significant
risk to birds and other wildlife, suffer themselves, and pose a
threat to human health.
Cats Indoors! encourages cat owners to keep their cats
indoors and advocates laws, regulations, and policies to protect
cats and birds, including the humane removal of free-roaming
cats from areas important to wildlife. The campaign promotes
grassroots efforts to address the issue at state and local
levels.
Federal Wildlife Funding
NJ Audubon has long advocated for federal wildlife funding.
While our New Jersey delegation, including Congressman Jim
Saxton, have taken strong leadership roles in support of this,
the funding program stands poised to be gutted in the 2003
budget. Through the federal State Wildlife Grants (SWG), $85
million was distributed to states in 2002 to help protect the
Noah’s Arc of wildlife.
Congress is threatening to cut SWG funds to $75 million in
2003. New Jersey stands to lose over $400,000 earmarked for
wildlife conservation. These funds help prevent wildlife from
becoming extinct through funding proactive efforts. President
Bush in his proposed 2004 budget has only earmarked $60 million
for SWG, which is far short of the $350 million goal. Please
visit http://www.teaming.com
for information on how you can help!
|