31.07.2015 Views

Management Plan - National Estuarine Research Reserve System

Management Plan - National Estuarine Research Reserve System

Management Plan - National Estuarine Research Reserve System

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

◊With partners (U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service,Maine Audubon, and the Maine Departmentof Inland Fisheries and Wildlife), protectedand monitored endangered least terns andpiping plovers on Laudholm Beach.in Southern Maine by supporting land trustsand watershed coalitions through training,information, GIS mapping, communication,and coordination. Offered programs in GISmapping, use of◊◊◊◊Partnered with NOAA, Rachel Carson NWR,and the Town of Wells on the restoration of the77-acre Drakes Island Marsh, which involvedinstallation of a new, wider culvert and Maine’sfirst self-regulating tide-gate.Assisted the York Conservation Commissionwith restoration of Wheeler Marsh through therepair of a damaged culvert and the improvementof tidal flow to the marsh.Developed and distributed comprehensivestrategy documents for seven southern Mainecoastal watersheds and conducted outreach toconservation groups on their implementation.Completed nonpoint source pollution surveysand management plans (through Clean WaterAct funding) for York River watershed andLittle River watershed; followed up withoutreach to communities and conservationgroups.◊◊◊GPS, easement monitoring, baseline data collection,and open space planning. Helped bring“Beginning with Habitat” digitized naturalresource data to southern Maine.Completed the first comprehensive digitizationof regional conserved lands in the state.Followed up by working with Maine CoastHeritage Trust and The Nature Conservancyto attach data to the State’s conserved landsGIS layer.Developed the Seacoast Watershed InformationManager (SWIM) program, an online resourcethat provides the public with tools to improvedecision-making about water resources andlandscape change in 15 coastal watersheds(38 municipalities) located along the southernMaine and New Hampshire coasts.◊◊Completed a non-point source pollution surveyfor Spruce Creek and Ogunquit River watersheds;followed up with outreach to communitiesand conservation groups.Established a Geographic Information <strong>System</strong>(GIS) Center at the <strong>Reserve</strong> to serve as aresource for <strong>Reserve</strong> programs, as well as formunicipalities, land trusts, and conservationorganizations.◊Developed and submitted (with MountAgamenticus to the Sea ConservationInitiative) a successful application for grantfunds from the NOAA Coastal and <strong>Estuarine</strong>Land Conservation Program (CELCP), whichresulted in the protection of 212 acres in SouthBerwick, 86 acres in Kittery, and 144 acres inYork.◊◊With nine other conservation organizations,founded the Mount Agamenticus to the SeaConservation Initiative, a landscape-scaleproject designed to protect high-quality landswithin a 48,000-acre focus area. Twenty-nineprojects have been completed conserving 1,515additional acres since November 2002, for atotal of 11,489 acres of open space.Initiated the Coastal Mosaic Project toincrease the pace of conservation in 22 townsFigure V.6. The <strong>Reserve</strong> published a book by TimSpahr and Cindy Dabrowski Kennie to help guidecommunities in the protection of streams andbrooks.<strong>Management</strong> <strong>Plan</strong>: Accomplishments39

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!