|
Future
vision necessary for Klamath refuges A May 13 article by Roy
Gault confirms there is much to celebrate this year on the This year marks Lower
Klamath National Wildlife Refuge's 100th anniversary and, as Gault
points out, will provide an opportunity to celebrate the refuge's
diverse bird life. It is true. In only
minutes, you might see any number of bird species, from golden eagles to
avocets and more. The President Roosevelt's
designation of 81,000 acres of marsh and open water in Today, a celebratory tour
of the refuge provides vastly different views, but it still includes the
invaluable biological diversity provided by native wetland grasses,
egrets, herons, pelicans and more. Visitors may notice,
however, that on one side of the highway (which blazes straight through
the middle of the refuge) is spectacular bird viewing, while on the
other are lease-land farms and grazing lands. The juxtaposition is
startling and calls into question what's in store for these refuges
during the next 100 years. Refuge managers strive to
do what's best for refuges, providing tours and educational
opportunities to encourage locals and visitors to enjoy the special
ecological niche these refuges fill. Unfortunately, tens of thousands of
refuge acres are at the mercy of commercial agriculture; while we
celebrate 100 years for a refuge, we also celebrate nearly 50 years for
lease-land farming on refuge land. Even before the passage
of the Kuchel Act in 1964, which barred future homesteading but allowed
continued leasing of 22,000 acres of refuge for commercial agriculture,
homesteads and farms have used refuge land to the benefit of
agribusiness. Because most of the In order for us to truly
celebrate these refuges, we need a vision for their future that creates
more habitat, cleaner water and safer havens for migratory and breeding
birds and other wildlife. This vision should still
include refuge tours, hearty celebration and ibises, but also water
guarantees for refuges, the phasing out of commercial agriculture of
National Wildlife Refuge land and a plan that brings Klamath Basin water
needs back into balance with what the region can naturally provide. Some
of the last remaining white pelicans should not be fighting for water
with farms; after all, they have candles to blow out. Ani Kame'enui of +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Source: http://www.statesmanjournal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/ 20080609/OPINION/806090311/1049
|