For Immediate Release: June 18, 2009
Contact: Kirsten Stade (202) 265-7337
AMERICA'S TEN MOST IMPERILED WILDLIFE REFUGES — Climate Change and Coping with Climate Change Challenge Nature Sanctuaries
Washington, DC — National Wildlife Refuges are already feeling the effects of climate change as well as negative side-effects of attempts to counter that change from wind farms and other renewable energy sources, according to a report released today by Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER) profiling refuges across the country facing the most acute threats from human activities.
America’s National Wildlife Refuge System shelters countless migratory waterfowl, native mammals, reptiles and amphibians. Commissioned in 1903 by President Theodore Roosevelt’s designation of Florida’s Pelican Island as the first refuge, the system now includes more than 540 refuges in all 50 states.
The 2009 roster of imperiled refuges focuses on the effects of climate change and our response to it. Rising sea levels, higher temperatures, drought and other effects of quickening climactic alterations are among the impacts Refuge Managers report to PEER. Attempts to mitigate climate change through pursuit of alternative energy sources are also affecting refuges. Wind farms near migratory paths of birds are threatening wildlife while transmission lines from remote solar plants are slicing up habitat.
Based upon interviews with refuge staff, PEER identified the Ten Most Imperiled Refuges in the U.S. These threatened refuges stretch from the coast of the Bering Sea to the shores of the Chesapeake Bay:
“Each of these threatened refuges has a different story, but they all share the peril of altered natural conditions from non-natural sources,” stated Grady Hocutt, a former long-time refuge manager who directs the PEER refuge program. “We hope that by drawing attention to the plight of these wildlife sanctuaries, they stand a better chance of meeting the threats they face.”
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