FWSRA-NEW https://fwsra.fwsretirees.org/ Everyone is a retiree in waiting Wed, 07 Aug 2024 20:42:03 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7 https://i0.wp.com/fwsra.fwsretirees.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/cropped-New-FWSRA-logo512.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 FWSRA-NEW https://fwsra.fwsretirees.org/ 32 32 230750029 Fire Suppression on Yukon Flats National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska Will Be Tried as a Cost-Effective Measure to Combat Climate Change https://fwsra.fwsretirees.org/2024/08/05/fire-suppression-on-yukon-flats-national-wildlife-refuge-in-alaska-will-be-tried-as-a-cost-effective-measure-to-combat-climate-change/ https://fwsra.fwsretirees.org/2024/08/05/fire-suppression-on-yukon-flats-national-wildlife-refuge-in-alaska-will-be-tried-as-a-cost-effective-measure-to-combat-climate-change/#respond Mon, 05 Aug 2024 21:34:53 +0000 https://fwsra.fwsretirees.org/?p=1997 The post Fire Suppression on Yukon Flats National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska Will Be Tried as a Cost-Effective Measure to Combat Climate Change appeared first on FWSRA-NEW.

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Fire Suppression on Yukon Flats National Wildlife Refuge in Alaska Will Be Tried as a Cost-Effective Measure to Combat Climate Change

Baked with the around-the-clock summer sunlight and regularly peppered with lightning strikes, the Yukon Flats region in eastern Interior Alaska is regularly set ablaze with fires that are considered part of the natural forest cycle. Standard practice is to let them burn out on their own, unless they threaten people, their homes or other economically valuable property.

That is set to change this summer. At the Yukon Flats National Wildlife Refuge, managers are experimenting with a fire plan aimed at protecting the sequestered carbon on the boreal forest floor and in the frozen soil below. In the 8-million-acre refuge, 1.6 million acres are now moved from the “limited” protection category, the lowest priority firefighting priority and usually applied to fires that are merely monitored, to the “modified” category, the next-higher priority.

The point of the limited firefighting is to put the brakes on what has been a troubling trend in the world’s boreal forests: a transition from their function as sinks that absorb atmospheric carbon into sources that pump more climate-warming gases into the air.

If carried out, the practice of fighting fires to prevent carbon emissions would be a first not just for Alaska but likely for the world’s boreal forests, said Jimmy Fox, the refuge’s manager. “There’s not been any land manager or land management agency that has made the decision that I’ve made,” Fox said. “It’s deemed a pretty radical idea. It’s controversial.”

Even if it is radical, the plan is also modest. If a wildfire breaks out on any of those newly designated “modified” response areas of the refuge, the plan calls for smokejumpers to be dispatched to try to limit the spread. It will not be the large-scale effort that is typically mounted in areas assigned higher priorities for firefighting, Fox said. Rather than stay as part of a big firefighting army, smokejumpers would be given 72 hours to contain the fire, and then they would be pulled out to work at higher-priority sites. The plan would be in effect only through early July, depending on the way events unfold, Fox said.

The plan, created with the help of Fairbanks-based permafrost expert Torre Jorgensen, emphasizes the areas of the refuge with the most thaw-vulnerable sites: those with yedoma, the term for permafrost that is at least 50% ice. It would have been used last year, Fox said, but there were no applicable refuge fires in 2023.

Fox has been among those pushing for firefighting to prevent carbon releases from the boreal forest, and he admits that he has “a bee in my bonnet for climate change.” The Yukon Flats suppression plan is justified by new scientific findings about boreal wildfires, he said. “There’s more and more research coming out making it so clear that there’s so much at stake here,” he said. From the Alaska Dispatch newspaper. See https://www.woodwellclimate.org/fire-suppression-yukon-flats-national-wildlife-refuge/ for a detailed article on the subject or https://www.adn.com/alaska-news/2024/06/05/an-alaska-wildlife-refuge-is-changing-its-wildfire-strategy-to-limit-carbon-emissions/ for the Alaska Dispatch newspaper article.

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Izembek Refuge Road / Land Exchange Update https://fwsra.fwsretirees.org/2023/05/03/izembek-refuge-road-land-exchange-update/ https://fwsra.fwsretirees.org/2023/05/03/izembek-refuge-road-land-exchange-update/#respond Wed, 03 May 2023 01:00:21 +0000 https://fwsra.fwsretirees.org/?p=387 The post Izembek Refuge Road / Land Exchange Update appeared first on FWSRA-NEW.

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Izembek Refuge Road / Land Exchange Update

04/08/2023 – Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland withdrew a land exchange between the Interior Department and King Cove Corporation authorized by Secretary Bernhardt in July 2019. The Department determined the 2019 land exchange contained procedural flaws and was not consistent with Departmental policy. It was entered into without public participation and did not analyze potential effects on subsistence uses and habitat. The Department intends to initiate an environmental analysis that will include robust nation-to-nation consultation and consider, among other things, the 2013 land exchange considered by Secretary Sally Jewell and a subsistence evaluation under Section 810 of the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA). In 2009 Congress directed the Secretary of the Interior to analyze a land exchange through the Izembek Refuge and the Izembek Wilderness. The proposal would have transferred approximately 200 acres within the refuge to the State of Alaska for a single-lane gravel road between the communities of King Cove and Cold Bay, Alaska and. “shall be used primarily for health and safety purposes and only for noncommercial purposes.” In exchange, the Service would receive approximately 43,000 acres of land owned by the State of Alaska (to be designated wilderness), and approximately 13,300 acres of land owned by King Cove Corporation. King Cove Corporation would also relinquish 5,430 acres of selected lands within Izembek Refuge. In December 2013, Secretary Jewell issued a Record of Decision declining the land exchange. On July 3, 2019, Secretary Bernhardt signed a memorandum approving a different land exchange between the Interior Department and King Cove Corporation. The 2019 exchange did not prohibit commercial use of the road, authorized gravel mining within the Refuge, and had far less land coming to the Refuge in the exchange. A federal district court in Alaska vacated the 2019 exchange due to several legal flaws, including that Secretary Bernhardt failed to properly justify his change in policy and rejection of Secretary Jewell’s prior conclusions. Here is a link to an article with some more details from the Anchorage Daily News.https://www.adn.com/alaska-news/2023/03/14/interior-secretary-withdraws-land-exchange-but-signals-support-for-road-through-alaskas-izembek-national-wildlife-refuge/

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Treaty to Protect Ocean Life https://fwsra.fwsretirees.org/2023/05/03/treaty-to-protect-ocean-life/ https://fwsra.fwsretirees.org/2023/05/03/treaty-to-protect-ocean-life/#respond Wed, 03 May 2023 00:32:46 +0000 https://fwsra.fwsretirees.org/?p=377 The post Treaty to Protect Ocean Life appeared first on FWSRA-NEW.

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Treaty to Protect Ocean Life

04/08/2023 – More than 190 countries have reached a landmark deal for protecting the biodiversity of the world’s oceans, agreeing for the first time on a common framework for establishing new protected areas in international waters. The treaty will not automatically establish any new marine protection areas, but it creates a mechanism for nations to begin designating them in international waters. Already being referred to as the ‘High Seas Treaty’, the legal framework would place 30 per cent of the world’s oceans into protected areas, put more money into marine conservation, and covers access to and use of marine genetic resources. Despite U.N. members agreeing to a final version of the text, it is still expected to take years for the treaty to be formally adopted by member states and come into force. Once it takes legal effect, nations can then begin proposing the establishment of new marine protection areas. From the Washington Post and United Nations website.

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New Secretarial Order on Bison Restoration https://fwsra.fwsretirees.org/2023/05/02/bison/ https://fwsra.fwsretirees.org/2023/05/02/bison/#respond Tue, 02 May 2023 22:17:19 +0000 https://fwsra.fwsretirees.org/?p=362 The post New Secretarial Order on Bison Restoration appeared first on FWSRA-NEW.

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New Secretarial Order on Bison Restoration

04/08/2023 – Secretary’s Order 3410 formally establishes a Bison Working Group (BWG), which will be composed of representation from the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA), Bureau of Land Management, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), National Park Service (NPS), and U.S. Geological Survey. The BWG will develop a Bison Shared Stewardship Plan. Central to the plan will be robust engagement with Tribes, including prioritizing Tribally led opportunities to establish new large herds owned or managed by Tribes and Tribally led organizations. The Order also direct the BIA to establish a Bison Management Apprenticeship program, in collaboration with the BWG, FWS and NPS. This new program will work to ensure that Tribes that manage bison herds on their own lands or through co-stewardship agreements will benefit from training and knowledge sharing to support talent and capacity in their communities, including opportunities for hands-on experience supported by national parks and national wildlife refuges.

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Horseshoe Crab harvest prohibited on many South Carolina beaches to protect shorebirds https://fwsra.fwsretirees.org/2023/05/02/red-knot/ https://fwsra.fwsretirees.org/2023/05/02/red-knot/#respond Tue, 02 May 2023 21:34:09 +0000 https://fwsra.fwsretirees.org/?p=354 The post Horseshoe Crab harvest prohibited on many South Carolina beaches to protect shorebirds appeared first on FWSRA-NEW.

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Horseshoe Crab Harvest Prohibited on Many South Carolina Beaches to Protect Shorebirds

04/08/2023 – Dozens of critical habitat areas for threatened shorebirds will be protected after a U.S. District Court in Charleston, South Carolina handed down an order prohibiting three groups from harvesting horseshoe crabs on several of South Carolina’s beaches this season. Red knots — a threatened migratory shorebird — depend on horseshoe crab eggs for survival, each one fueling up on hundreds of thousands of the arthropod eggs in South Carolina on the way to the Canadian Arctic, according to previous reporting by The State Media Co. But when horseshoe crabs are taken from the beaches red knots flock to, harvested for the benefit of pharmaceutical companies that use the crabs’ blue blood to detect bacterial toxins, it removes the red knots’ food source. Companies in Europe and Asia have switched to using a synthetic copy of the ingredient, which does not require horseshoe crabs to be captured or bled, On Thursday, April 6, 2023, an order signed by U.S. District Judge Richard Mark Gergel puts a pause on horseshoe crab harvesting for three opposing groups that applies to nearly 30 beaches in South Carolina. The order lasts through the spawning season, which begins March 15 and ends June 15. The beaches listed have been identified by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the state Department of Natural Resources as critical habitat areas for red knots. Full article here.

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