Ten Wild Places Saved by Endangered Species Protections
An Environmental Article from All-Creatures.org

From

Center for Biological Diversity
May 2016

While the Endangered Species Act is best known for saving 99 percent of protected species from extinction, many people don’t realize that protecting animals and plants under the Act has also resulted in the preservation of some of America’s most beautiful and cherished refuges and public spaces.

In celebration of the country’s 11th annual Endangered Species Day, the Center for Biological Diversity today released a new report highlighting 10 of the most unique and beautiful wild places saved by the presence of endangered species.

Read Saving Species and Wild Spaces: 10 Extraordinary Places Saved by the Endangered Species Act (PDF)

From Pacific Ocean kelp forests to Florida’s Key Deer National Wildlife Refuge, millions of acres of the nation’s most precious and irreplaceable landscapes and seascapes have been conserved and restored as part of the cooperative management of our public lands to recover imperiled species.

“While the Endangered Species Act is best known for saving 99 percent of protected species from extinction, many people don’t realize that protecting animals and plants under the Act has also resulted in the preservation of some of America’s most beautiful and cherished refuges and public spaces,” said Jamie Pang, an endangered species campaigner at the Center. “Thanks to the Act and its mandate to save endangered species and the places they live, we have more national wildlife refuges, as well as healthier lands, cleaner rivers, oceans and lakes where we can hike, fish and observe wildlife.”

The power of the Act to conserve and heal landscapes, oceans and waterways while protecting and recovering species is in evidence in every region of the country. Among the areas highlighted in today’s report, Saving Species and Wild Spaces, 10 Extraordinary Places Saved by the Endangered Species Act, are:

Sauta Cave National Wildlife Refuge, in Alabama, was purchased specifically to protect endangered gray and Indiana bats, providing a summer roosting site for 200,000 to 400,000 gray bats and critical winter hibernacula for both species. Bats provide vitally important ecological service by eating millions of mosquitoes and insects a year. Even after the cave entrances were closed off to protect the species, thousands of visitors come to the refuge every summer to watch the bats fly out at dusk.

The recovery of the once-flagging Pacific kelp beds off the California coast was triggered only after Endangered Species Act protections recovered populations of sea otters, which, in turn, once again started doing the important job of keeping in check a sea urchin population that had overgrazed the underwater kelp forests. Kelp forests play a critical role in absorbing wave energy to prevent shoreline erosion, absorbing greenhouse gases, and providing ecotourism opportunities.

Created in 1992 to protect to endangered songbirds, Balcones Canyonlands National Wildlife Refuge, overlooking the city of Austin, Texas provides surrounding communities with popular recreational and tourism opportunities and offers protection for the critical landscape responsible for recharging a key regional water source, the Edwards aquifer.

Endangered Species Act protections for Atlantic salmon, shortnose sturgeon and Atlantic sturgeon spurred dam removals that helped restore the health of Maine’s longest river, the Penobscot, which not only provides a home to birds, mammals and 11 fish species but is a popular recreation and fishing spot.

Other places included in the report are Hawaii’s Hakalau Forest National Wildlife Refuge, Arizona’s San Bernardino National Wildlife Refuge, the Southeast’s longleaf pine ecosystem, the Virgin Islands’ Green Cay National Wildlife Refuge and Lake Erie.

“We should step back and truly appreciate all the things the Act has done,” said Pang.

“Without the powerful conservation tools it provides, America’s most important landscapes, waterways and coastlines would be very different places today.”


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