Montana Gets Conservation Area for Wildlife, Bull Trout
Friday, May 27, 2005 (PST)
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Northwest Montana has a new wildlife
conservation area built around the Bull River south of Troy by a
coalition of government agencies, conservation groups and industrial
partners. A dedication ceremony was held
Wednesday for the 1,800-acre Bull River Wildlife Management Area. The
event was attended by about 30 people, most of them representing The
Conservation Fund; the Washington-based Avista power company; Montana
Fish, Wildlife & Parks; Plum Creek Timber Co. and the U.S. Fish
and Wildlife Service. The dedication culminated several years
of complex negotiations in establishing a conservation agreement that
protects migratory corridors for wildlife as well as spawning and
rearing habitat for bull trout. Negotiated by The Conservation Fund,
the agreement leverages protection, mitigation, and enhancement
funding from Avista's Clark Fork Settlement Agreement with a $4.6
million Habitat Conservation Plan grant from the U.S. Fish and
Wildlife Service. The grant allowed for the outright
purchase of 1,325 acres by Montana Fish, Wildlife and Parks. The
remaining 500 acres is protected through a conservation easement
purchased by Avista. Most of the land was purchased from Plum Creek. It is the eighth wildlife management
area to be designated in northwest Montana. The largest is the
Ninepipe Wildlife Management Area south of Polson, at 3,781 acres. "This public-private partnership
demonstrates the extraordinary results that can be achieved when
corporations, public agencies and nonprofit partners work together to
find balanced conservation solutions," said Larry Selzer, The
Conservation Fund's president. "Thanks to the leadership of
Avista and Plum Creek and the commitment of Montana Fish, Wildlife
& Parks and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, we are protecting some
of the West's most spectacular wildlife habitat and enhancing
recreation opportunities for future generations." Identified by state and federal
agencies as one of the most important tributaries for fisheries in the
Lower Clark Fork River system, the Bull River parcel provides critical
habitat for the recovery of the threatened bull trout. It also
sustains winter range and wildlife migration corridors linking the
East and West Cabinet Mountains that are considered important for big
game, waterfowl, fur bearers and grizzly bears. The Bull River flows 18 miles from its
source high in the Cabinet Mountains Wilderness Area to its junction
with the Clark Fork River. The region's glacier-carved mountains and
forested slopes provide a haven for outdoor enthusiasts and are home
to deer, elk, moose, bear and various bird species including bald
eagles, waterfowl and songbirds. |