|
|
Kittatinny Raptor Corridor
Project
An Interstate Conservation Project Monitoring A
Mountain's Vital Signs
The Kittatinny Raptor Corridor Project is a long-term
wildlife conservation program initiated in 1992. Its goal: To preserve
biological diversity by encouraging the protection, preservation, and
environmentally appropriate use of wildlife habitat and open space along the
Kittatinny-Shawangunk Ridge and raptor corridor in New York,
New Jersey, and Pennsylvania.
Essentially, we are monitoring the ecological vital signs
of the entire mountain, recommending assistance where needed, developing pilot
and widespread ecotourism information and programs, and preparing and
distributing related educational materials.
The Center's concerns regarding environmentally appropriate
uses of the Kittatinny Ridge and its corridor are rooted in our long-term Bake
Oven Knob Hawkwatch which has monitored autumn hawk migrations since the early
1960s, a defeated hydrocarbon-contaminated soil-burning incinerator near the
internationally important Bake Oven Knob hawk migration observatory, subdivision
of land at the Pinnacle, and other environmentally insensitive land use
activities.
The Kittatinny Ridge is a long mountain extending across
parts of three states. It begins as the Shawangunk
Range in New York,
runs across northwestern New Jersey,
and continues across southeastern Pennsylvania
to its terminus west of Carlisle, Pa.
This beautiful mountain is best known as one of North America's
most important autumn raptor migration flyways, and part of the route of the
famous Appalachian Trail. Hawk migration observation sites
are located along its summit in all three states.
Some sections of the mountain and corridor are in public
or informed private ownership, and thus protected, but much of the mountain is
underappreciated as a national treasure.
Parts of the mountain and corridor also are suffering
environmental stress and could be lost to inappropriate land uses or other
factors including lack of local zoning codes, forest fragmentation, land
speculation and development, logging, quarrying, incinerator construction,
wetlands loss, and one federal Superfund site. Hence action is necessary if the
largely unspoiled character and natural features of much of the mountain, and
numerous sections of the corridor, are to remain intact as a vital wildlife and
wildlands area.
In March 1992, we recommended that the federal government
designate the entire length of the Kittatinny-Shawangunk Ridge the "Kittatinny
National Raptor Flyway." The designation would not alter private or public
ownership of land along the mountain. In 1978, the Lehigh County, Pa., executive
had designated the Lehigh
County section of the mountain the
Lehigh County Raptor Migration Area, and the Pennsylvania Game Commission
designated Pennsylvania's entire
length of the Kittatinny Ridge the Kittatinny Ridge Birds of Prey Natural Area.
These actions and concerns, and the Center's Bake Oven Knob
Hawk Watch, form the beginning of the long-term Kittatinny Raptor Corridor
Project which has five basic objectives:
- To foster via expanded
public education programs a widespread and strong body of public concern,
appreciation, and support (an actual land ethic) for protection and
preservation of the entire Kittatinny Ridge and its corridor.
- To encourage private
landowners, governmental agencies, and nonprofit organizations to preserve
more key wildlife habitat on the Kittatinny Ridge and within the Raptor
Corridor via use of appropriate land preservation techniques including
gifts, direct purchases, acquisition of development and/or other easements,
etc. Additional wildlife habitat preservation on the mountain and within the
corridor helps assure that this major bird migration flyway continues to
link New England, Adirondack, Catskill, and Pocono Mountain wildlands areas
with wildlands wintering grounds in the southeastern United States and Latin
America.
- To identify, contact, and
work cooperatively with as many conservation and citizen organizations as
possible to achieve the stated protection, preservation, and appropriate use
objectives of the Kittatinny Ridge and corridor.
- To expand the Center's data
bases and conduct additional necessary wildlife field studies and other
research at Bake Oven Knob and elsewhere within the Kittatinny Raptor
Corridor. Further raptor studies in the Bake Oven Knob area, and preliminary
ground and/or aerial surveys of all or parts of the Kittatinny Ridge will be
among the necessary activities.
- To secure a 50- to 100-acre
wildlife refuge and headquarters for the Lehigh Gap Nature Center within
the corridor, preferably close to Bake Oven Knob, Pa.
As the project continues, we seek to cooperate with dozens
of agencies, institutions, organizations, and individuals along the ridge and
corridor. Significant opportunities are available to participate. We encourage
people to become Center members and participate.
Agencies, institutions, and organizations can assist the
project by sending a letter of endorsement for the Kittatinny Raptor Corridor
Project to the Lehigh Gap Nature Center, Inc. Nearly two dozen local,
regional, state, and national agencies, institutions, and organizations thus far
have endorsed the project.
The primary focus of The Kittatinny Raptor Corridor Project
is preservation of biological diversity, conservation of wildlife, and
protection and preservation of its habitat along the Kittatinny Ridge and
corridor.
To determine which areas are particularly important and/or
at risk, surveys of mammals, birds, reptiles and amphibians, fish, and other
species are needed along the entire length of the mountain and corridor. For
example, we are cataloging Black Bear sightings, species and locations of big
(large and old) trees, and conducting other wildlife inventories at specific
locations. Fortunately, in some locations decades of published data are
available. Indeed, a major corridor project priority is searching the published
conservation, natural history, and scientific literature. From those sources,
and newly secured data, we are building enhanced data bases reflecting current
and changing mountain and corridor conditions.
If the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service has identified and
listed critical habitat for federally endangered or threatened species in a
section of the ridge or corridor, details of the endangered species and the type
of habitat so designated are being computer catalogued. Where the National Park
Service designated Registered Natural Landmarks, those sites also are being
catalogued.
Sites of natural history, scientific, and historic
importance in local sections also are being identified and catalogued. Examples
include wetlands, type locations of animal and plant species, scenic, unusual,
and important geologic formations or features, and type sections of geologic
formations. Prehistoric archaeological locations also are being identified and
catalogued.
Also being catalogued are state game lands, public parks,
and special refuges or reserves, plus communications towers, power lines,
pipelines, and roads fragmenting the ridge, locations of forest fires, and even
airplane crashes against the ridge or in close proximity to it.
The status of zoning in each township along the
three-state length of the Kittatinny Ridge is of basic concern because some
townships lack zoning. Therefore, the Center is establishing a computer
inventory of the zoning code status of each township within the corridor.
Currently a number of townships without zoning are open to environmentally
inappropriate land uses. Those townships are vulnerable, and will receive
special attention.
The Center also is establishing field and in-house research
projects. Raptor surveys are conducted in some sections of the corridor, and
observers are working on other wildlife surveys. The Center also established a
registry of photographic stations. These are fixed-site locations from which
photographs are taken at periodic intervals. A computer data base stores related
information. The result is an invaluable ground-level record of landscape
changes.
Development of ecotourism along the Kittatinny raptor
corridor is a major part of the project. Emphasis is being placed on developing
economic values for visits to scenic areas, and for bird watching, hawk
watching, and nature photography. The Lehigh Gap
Nature Center
long has advocated these activities because they are the most ecologically sound
and economically desirable options from a range of possible wildlife-associated
opportunities.
Public education is an important part of The Kittatinny
Raptor Corridor Project. For details, see our
Educational Programs page.
Protection of wildlife habitat and open space along the
Kittatinny raptor corridor is essential. The Lehigh Gap
Nature Center
encourages townships within the raptor corridor to save as much habitat as
possible as wildlife refuges.
We also urge private land owners to preserve land as
wildlife habitat and open space. Even areas as small are 100 square feet can be
planted in wildflowers to serve as butterfly gardens and perhaps attract
Ruby-throated Hummingbirds.
A new field of study called "stopover ecology" is
developing that draws attention to the importance of sites that birds stop at
during migration to rest, feed, or find shelter. These sites are crucial to the
survival of these migrants. The Wildlife
Center advocates preservation of as much
land as possible as stopover habitat. This of course refers not only to land on
the ridge itself, but also in the corridor which extends out several miles from
the base of the ridge. This means preservation of farms and woodlots along the
corridor. Home owners, even with small backyards, can contribute significantly
to wildlife habitat by developing backyard habitats. A large number of such
habitats could have a great impact on the survival of certain species.
Our
Lehigh Gap Restoration Project is the centerpiece of our land preservation
activities. This project encompasses establishing a wildlife refuge of
approximately 800 acres of environmentally degraded land in the Lehigh Gap for
the purposes of restoration, study, and education.
|