Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumSalazar Establishes 558th National Wildlife Refuge Unit in Colorado’s Sangre de Cristo Mountains
Secretary of Interior Ken Salazar today announced the formal establishment of the Sangre de Cristo Conservation Area as the nations 558th unit of the National Wildlife Refuge System, thanks to the donation of a nearly 77,000-acre conservation easement in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains bordering the San Luis Valley by noted conservationist Louis Bacon.
Following in the footsteps of our greatest conservationists, Louis Bacons generosity and passion for the great outdoors is helping us to establish an extraordinary conservation area in one of our nations most beautiful places, Secretary Salazar said. This newest treasure in our National Wildlife Refuge System links together a diverse mosaic of public and private lands, protects working landscapes and water quality, and creates a landscape corridor for fish and wildlife unlike any place in the world.
Bacon, a longtime advocate and proponent of landscape and wildlife conservation, is donating a conservation easement on nearly 77,000 acres of his 81,400-acre Trinchera Ranch. Todays action builds on his previously announced intention also to donate a perpetual conservation easement on the 90,000 acre Blanca Ranch, bringing the total amount of permanently protected land to nearly 170,000 acres. When completed, the two easements will represent the largest
donation ever to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Service). The Blanca Ranch easement donation is expected to be finalized later this year.
We are too quickly losing important landscapes in this country to development and I worry that if we do not act to protect them now, future generations will grow up in a profoundly different world, said Bacon. This motivates me and is why I am proud to place Trinchera Ranch, Blancas adjoining ranch, into a conservation easement forever protecting it with the US Fish and Wildlife Service. I am also honored to help Secretary Salazar and the US Fish and Wildlife Service create the Sangre de Cristo Conservation Area in Colorados San Luis Valley. It is an area widely known for its cultural, geographic, wildlife and habitat resources, and this conservation area provides another opportunity to conserve it in perpetuity.
http://www.fws.gov/mountain-prairie/pressrel/2012/09142012_SangredeCristo_CA.pdf
limpyhobbler
(8,244 posts)hatrack
(59,592 posts)Still, at least Salazar's done something decent.