Habitats
Well I am from Michigan, so I am going to state some things on Michigan if anyone else lives here and wants to know more
A great Website to find many things about Michigan's wildlife and resources if to goto: http://www.Michigan.gov/dnr
THe Northern Great Lakes Forest Project just had a record-setting conservation easement totaling 247,806 acres stretching across the U.P. from Gogebic County in the west, to Chippawa County in the East.
The closure of the final phase of the Northern Great Lakes Forest Project in the fall of 2010, marked an unprecedented accomplishment in the conservation of the spectacular forests, lakes, streams, and wetland's of Michigan's Upper Peninsula.
The DNR offers many programs for children and adults about animals and habitats, like for children there is the salmon in the classroom: which is teacher's can integrate into their lessons plans by raising salmon.
and Hunter education/ Recreational safety classes.
Specific Projects through Michigan DNR Conservation and Restoration Programs
• Clean Michigan Initiative (CMI)
The CMI is a $100 million bond program initiated with the approval of Proposal C on the November 3, 1998 ballot. The program provides $50 million in grants to local units of government for the development and renovation of public recreation facilities, and $50 million for extensive State park renovations.
• Forest Stewardship
• Park Stewardship
The stewardship program strives to balance resource protection with compatible recreational use. To accomplish this mission the program seeks to lessen the impact of 28 million visitors each year on fragile park natural resources.
• Natural Areas
Natural areas are recognized internationally as an important tool for managing ecosystems, associated natural resources, and safeguarding our natural heritage.
• Natural Beauty Roads
The natural Beauty Road Act empowers County Road commissions (CRC) and legislative bodies of cities and villages to dedicate county-local roads and city/village streets as Michigan Natural Beauty Roads.
• Natural Rivers
Michigan is blessed with more than 36,000 miles of rivers and streams, including over 12,000 miles of cold water trout streams! The Natural Rivers Program was developed to preserve, protect and enhance our state's finest river systems for the use and enjoyment of current and future generations by allowing property owners their right to reasonable development, while protecting Michigan's unique river resources.
A great Website to find many things about Michigan's wildlife and resources if to goto: http://www.Michigan.gov/dnr
THe Northern Great Lakes Forest Project just had a record-setting conservation easement totaling 247,806 acres stretching across the U.P. from Gogebic County in the west, to Chippawa County in the East.
The closure of the final phase of the Northern Great Lakes Forest Project in the fall of 2010, marked an unprecedented accomplishment in the conservation of the spectacular forests, lakes, streams, and wetland's of Michigan's Upper Peninsula.
The DNR offers many programs for children and adults about animals and habitats, like for children there is the salmon in the classroom: which is teacher's can integrate into their lessons plans by raising salmon.
and Hunter education/ Recreational safety classes.
Specific Projects through Michigan DNR Conservation and Restoration Programs
• Clean Michigan Initiative (CMI)
The CMI is a $100 million bond program initiated with the approval of Proposal C on the November 3, 1998 ballot. The program provides $50 million in grants to local units of government for the development and renovation of public recreation facilities, and $50 million for extensive State park renovations.
• Forest Stewardship
• Park Stewardship
The stewardship program strives to balance resource protection with compatible recreational use. To accomplish this mission the program seeks to lessen the impact of 28 million visitors each year on fragile park natural resources.
• Natural Areas
Natural areas are recognized internationally as an important tool for managing ecosystems, associated natural resources, and safeguarding our natural heritage.
• Natural Beauty Roads
The natural Beauty Road Act empowers County Road commissions (CRC) and legislative bodies of cities and villages to dedicate county-local roads and city/village streets as Michigan Natural Beauty Roads.
• Natural Rivers
Michigan is blessed with more than 36,000 miles of rivers and streams, including over 12,000 miles of cold water trout streams! The Natural Rivers Program was developed to preserve, protect and enhance our state's finest river systems for the use and enjoyment of current and future generations by allowing property owners their right to reasonable development, while protecting Michigan's unique river resources.
Habitat Restoration
While existing laws and programs now protect or encourage preservation of many natural resources and landscapes, there is a clear need to go beyond protection and preservation – to restoration of damaged critical natural habitats. Habitat restoration is an important and growing element of efforts to preserve our natural heritage and to protect and restore the critical "services" that the environment provides.
The Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs (EEA) is the principal state agency charged with maintaining the quality of the environment and protecting the natural resources of the Commonwealth. EEA coordinates, supports, or is a partner with state agencies and others in various restoration programs and projects.
What is habitat restoration?
Restoration is broadly defined as the act, process, or result of returning a degraded or former habitat to a healthy, self-sustaining condition that resembles as closely as possible its pre-disturbed state. Examples of restoration include removing material from a filled wetland, increasing tidal flow to a restricted wetland, re-establishing natural river flow, enhancing degraded seafloor habitats, treating runoff to improve water quality, cleaning up contaminated habitats, and managing invasive species. Many projects involve multiple types of restoration and focus on improving the health of whole ecosystems.
Why is habitat restoration a priority?
Massachusetts has lost some of its natural habitats to historic human impacts while others have been damaged. Some examples include:
Over one-third of our wetlands have been lost to filling and other alterations
Thousands of acres of coastal marshes are impacted by restricted tidal flow
Over 3,000 dams fragment and degrade our rivers and streams
Numerous river basins are highly stressed due to lack of adequate water flow
Ocean resources have been damaged and depleted
Road and rail crossings alter wetland hydrology and impede fish and wildlife passage
Habitats across the state are degraded by poor water quality and contamination
Dozens of non-native species have invaded vast areas of our natural landscapes
These impacts translate into lost habitat and ecological services for Massachusetts citizens and its wildlife inhabitants. Whether protecting people from flooding, improving water quality, enhancing property values, supporting natural resource-based industries (e.g., fishing), providing recreation opportunities, or sustaining public water supplies; the natural habitats of Massachusetts offer immeasurable benefits to the public. When these benefits are diminished, people and communities suffer the consequences. Therefore, EEA places a high priority on efforts to restore natural habitats and the services they provide.
Programs and Projects Restoring Habitats
Recognizing the importance of restoration in the overall toolbox of environmental stewardship, EEA supports a variety of programs and projects that focus on restoring critical natural habitats.
EEA Programs
Bottom Sediment Enhancement Project will enhance key bottom sediments within Massachusetts Bay by building a rocky reef in order to provide habitat that is critical to several life stages of commercially important species such as American lobster, winter flounder, sea scallops, sea urchins, Atlantic cod, and numerous other species of fish and invertebrates.
Contact: Bruce Estrella (508) 563-1779, ext. 114 / [email protected]
Eelgrass Restoration Project is underway in Boston Harbor to provide important shallow water eelgrass habitat to juvenile crustaceans, shellfish, and finfish which commonly inhabit sea grass meadows.
Contact: Bruce Estrella (508) 563-1779, ext. 114 / [email protected]
Lakes and Ponds Program works with local groups and municipalities to protect, manage, and restore these valuable aquatic resources.
Contact: Jim Straub (617) 626-1411 / [email protected]
Natural Heritage & Endangered Species Program (NHESP) is responsible for the conservation and protection of Massachusetts' biodiversity including the species officially listed as Endangered, Threatened, or of Special Concern under the Massachusetts Endangered Species Act. NHESP operates the Ecological Restoration Program that supports restoration efforts in a variety of habitat types.
Contact: Tim Simmons (508) 792-7270 ext.126 / [email protected]
Natural Resource Damages Assessment and Restoration Program allows the Commonwealth, under state and federal environmental statutes, to bring an action or claim for liability against a responsible party for natural resource damages (NRD) resulting from a release or threat of release of oil or hazardous substances. The Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs has been designated by the Governor as Trustee for natural resources of the Commonwealth. The NRD process generally includes injury assessment / quantification, damage determination, and restoration planning / implementation to restore, replace, or acquire the equivalent of the injured resources. The overall goal of NRD is to restore injured resources to functional ecological systems, and may also include compensation to the public for the lost use (including human use) of the injured resource from onset of injury to completion of restoration.
Contact: Karen Pelto (617) 626-1134 / [email protected]
Recreational and Anadromous Fisheries Program is responsible for the management and restoration of recreational and anadromous fish resources.
Contact: Brad Chase (978) 282-0308 ext. 111 / [email protected]
Riverways Program is focused on the restoration and protection of the ecological integrity of the Commonwealth's watersheds: rivers, streams, and adjacent lands. The program works to restore degraded riparian and in-stream habitats using a community based approach. Restoration techniques include restoring natural river flow levels and eliminating impediments to the movement of fish, wildlife, and other aquatic organisms through dam removal, culvert upgrades, stream daylighting, and natural channel modifications.
Contact: Joan Kimball (617) 626-1544 / [email protected]
Wetlands Restoration Program works to help people voluntarily restore the state's degraded and former coastal wetlands and the services they provide. The program serves as a facilitator of restoration – working to identify new projects, organize project teams, provide technical assistance, secure project funding, and help manage and coordinate restoration activities from start to finish. Founded on a strong partnership model, the program works with many federal, state, and local partners to complete restoration projects. WRP also funds technical services and a grants program to help partners achieve their restoration goals.
Contact: Hunt Durey (617) 626-1245 / [email protected]
EEA Restoration Coordination
EEA Habitat Restoration Network, established in 2005, is an informal collaboration between EEA restoration programs that fosters the sharing of information, experiences, and expertise to advance the science, policy, and practice of habitat restoration in the Commonwealth. Representatives from EEA agencies and programs involved in restoration meet quarterly and communicate regularly.
Contact: Hunt Durey (617) 626-1245 / [email protected]
Partnership to Restore Massachusetts Aquatic Habitats was originally founded in the mid-1990s to support wetland restoration efforts across Massachusetts. In 2005, representatives agreed to broaden the Partnership to include all types of aquatic habitats and to expand the membership to all state programs involved in aquatic habitat restoration. Partners consist of state and federal restoration and regulatory programs, corporate and non-profit conservation groups. The Partnership meets twice per year and coordinates on existing and new projects, funding needs and opportunities, regulatory and policy issues, and other items as needed.
In 2007, EEA Secretary Bowles formed the Aquatic Habitat Restoration Task Force which provided recommendations to guide restoration efforts of EEA and its partners.
Aquatic Habitat Restoration Task Force Report and Recommendations: http://www.mass.gov/czm/habitat/ahrtf.htm
Contact: Hunt Durey (617) 626-1245 / [email protected]
Public-Private Partnerships
Massachusetts Corporate Wetlands Restoration Partnership (CWRP), although not a state program, is closely affiliated with EEA restoration efforts and provides significant support for aquatic habitat restoration across the Commonwealth. Based on a model of public-private partnerships that is strongly encouraged by EEA, the CWRP is a non-profit organization that works to generate donations of funds and technical services from private companies that help advance aquatic habitat restoration projects. Donations often serve as critical non-federal match for federal agency restoration grants.
Contact: Susan Redlich (617) 287-5568 / [email protected]
Regional Habitat Restoration
The Gulf of Maine Council on the Marine Environment is an international body with representatives from Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Maine, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia. Its mission is to maintain and enhance environmental quality in the Gulf of Maine (Cape Cod Bay to Nova Scotia) and to allow for sustainable resource use by existing and future generations. The Council pursues this mission by guiding and supporting research, management, and habitat restoration activities in the Gulf of Maine, and by fostering cross-border cooperation among government, non-government, academic and private groups.
While existing laws and programs now protect or encourage preservation of many natural resources and landscapes, there is a clear need to go beyond protection and preservation – to restoration of damaged critical natural habitats. Habitat restoration is an important and growing element of efforts to preserve our natural heritage and to protect and restore the critical "services" that the environment provides.
The Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs (EEA) is the principal state agency charged with maintaining the quality of the environment and protecting the natural resources of the Commonwealth. EEA coordinates, supports, or is a partner with state agencies and others in various restoration programs and projects.
What is habitat restoration?
Restoration is broadly defined as the act, process, or result of returning a degraded or former habitat to a healthy, self-sustaining condition that resembles as closely as possible its pre-disturbed state. Examples of restoration include removing material from a filled wetland, increasing tidal flow to a restricted wetland, re-establishing natural river flow, enhancing degraded seafloor habitats, treating runoff to improve water quality, cleaning up contaminated habitats, and managing invasive species. Many projects involve multiple types of restoration and focus on improving the health of whole ecosystems.
Why is habitat restoration a priority?
Massachusetts has lost some of its natural habitats to historic human impacts while others have been damaged. Some examples include:
Over one-third of our wetlands have been lost to filling and other alterations
Thousands of acres of coastal marshes are impacted by restricted tidal flow
Over 3,000 dams fragment and degrade our rivers and streams
Numerous river basins are highly stressed due to lack of adequate water flow
Ocean resources have been damaged and depleted
Road and rail crossings alter wetland hydrology and impede fish and wildlife passage
Habitats across the state are degraded by poor water quality and contamination
Dozens of non-native species have invaded vast areas of our natural landscapes
These impacts translate into lost habitat and ecological services for Massachusetts citizens and its wildlife inhabitants. Whether protecting people from flooding, improving water quality, enhancing property values, supporting natural resource-based industries (e.g., fishing), providing recreation opportunities, or sustaining public water supplies; the natural habitats of Massachusetts offer immeasurable benefits to the public. When these benefits are diminished, people and communities suffer the consequences. Therefore, EEA places a high priority on efforts to restore natural habitats and the services they provide.
Programs and Projects Restoring Habitats
Recognizing the importance of restoration in the overall toolbox of environmental stewardship, EEA supports a variety of programs and projects that focus on restoring critical natural habitats.
EEA Programs
Bottom Sediment Enhancement Project will enhance key bottom sediments within Massachusetts Bay by building a rocky reef in order to provide habitat that is critical to several life stages of commercially important species such as American lobster, winter flounder, sea scallops, sea urchins, Atlantic cod, and numerous other species of fish and invertebrates.
Contact: Bruce Estrella (508) 563-1779, ext. 114 / [email protected]
Eelgrass Restoration Project is underway in Boston Harbor to provide important shallow water eelgrass habitat to juvenile crustaceans, shellfish, and finfish which commonly inhabit sea grass meadows.
Contact: Bruce Estrella (508) 563-1779, ext. 114 / [email protected]
Lakes and Ponds Program works with local groups and municipalities to protect, manage, and restore these valuable aquatic resources.
Contact: Jim Straub (617) 626-1411 / [email protected]
Natural Heritage & Endangered Species Program (NHESP) is responsible for the conservation and protection of Massachusetts' biodiversity including the species officially listed as Endangered, Threatened, or of Special Concern under the Massachusetts Endangered Species Act. NHESP operates the Ecological Restoration Program that supports restoration efforts in a variety of habitat types.
Contact: Tim Simmons (508) 792-7270 ext.126 / [email protected]
Natural Resource Damages Assessment and Restoration Program allows the Commonwealth, under state and federal environmental statutes, to bring an action or claim for liability against a responsible party for natural resource damages (NRD) resulting from a release or threat of release of oil or hazardous substances. The Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs has been designated by the Governor as Trustee for natural resources of the Commonwealth. The NRD process generally includes injury assessment / quantification, damage determination, and restoration planning / implementation to restore, replace, or acquire the equivalent of the injured resources. The overall goal of NRD is to restore injured resources to functional ecological systems, and may also include compensation to the public for the lost use (including human use) of the injured resource from onset of injury to completion of restoration.
Contact: Karen Pelto (617) 626-1134 / [email protected]
Recreational and Anadromous Fisheries Program is responsible for the management and restoration of recreational and anadromous fish resources.
Contact: Brad Chase (978) 282-0308 ext. 111 / [email protected]
Riverways Program is focused on the restoration and protection of the ecological integrity of the Commonwealth's watersheds: rivers, streams, and adjacent lands. The program works to restore degraded riparian and in-stream habitats using a community based approach. Restoration techniques include restoring natural river flow levels and eliminating impediments to the movement of fish, wildlife, and other aquatic organisms through dam removal, culvert upgrades, stream daylighting, and natural channel modifications.
Contact: Joan Kimball (617) 626-1544 / [email protected]
Wetlands Restoration Program works to help people voluntarily restore the state's degraded and former coastal wetlands and the services they provide. The program serves as a facilitator of restoration – working to identify new projects, organize project teams, provide technical assistance, secure project funding, and help manage and coordinate restoration activities from start to finish. Founded on a strong partnership model, the program works with many federal, state, and local partners to complete restoration projects. WRP also funds technical services and a grants program to help partners achieve their restoration goals.
Contact: Hunt Durey (617) 626-1245 / [email protected]
EEA Restoration Coordination
EEA Habitat Restoration Network, established in 2005, is an informal collaboration between EEA restoration programs that fosters the sharing of information, experiences, and expertise to advance the science, policy, and practice of habitat restoration in the Commonwealth. Representatives from EEA agencies and programs involved in restoration meet quarterly and communicate regularly.
Contact: Hunt Durey (617) 626-1245 / [email protected]
Partnership to Restore Massachusetts Aquatic Habitats was originally founded in the mid-1990s to support wetland restoration efforts across Massachusetts. In 2005, representatives agreed to broaden the Partnership to include all types of aquatic habitats and to expand the membership to all state programs involved in aquatic habitat restoration. Partners consist of state and federal restoration and regulatory programs, corporate and non-profit conservation groups. The Partnership meets twice per year and coordinates on existing and new projects, funding needs and opportunities, regulatory and policy issues, and other items as needed.
In 2007, EEA Secretary Bowles formed the Aquatic Habitat Restoration Task Force which provided recommendations to guide restoration efforts of EEA and its partners.
Aquatic Habitat Restoration Task Force Report and Recommendations: http://www.mass.gov/czm/habitat/ahrtf.htm
Contact: Hunt Durey (617) 626-1245 / [email protected]
Public-Private Partnerships
Massachusetts Corporate Wetlands Restoration Partnership (CWRP), although not a state program, is closely affiliated with EEA restoration efforts and provides significant support for aquatic habitat restoration across the Commonwealth. Based on a model of public-private partnerships that is strongly encouraged by EEA, the CWRP is a non-profit organization that works to generate donations of funds and technical services from private companies that help advance aquatic habitat restoration projects. Donations often serve as critical non-federal match for federal agency restoration grants.
Contact: Susan Redlich (617) 287-5568 / [email protected]
Regional Habitat Restoration
The Gulf of Maine Council on the Marine Environment is an international body with representatives from Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Maine, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia. Its mission is to maintain and enhance environmental quality in the Gulf of Maine (Cape Cod Bay to Nova Scotia) and to allow for sustainable resource use by existing and future generations. The Council pursues this mission by guiding and supporting research, management, and habitat restoration activities in the Gulf of Maine, and by fostering cross-border cooperation among government, non-government, academic and private groups.