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Gopher Tortoise habitat needs your help (you know what this means)

DeanAlessandrini Oct 13, 2003 01:23 PM

GT habitat IS indigo habitat.
First let me plug this group:

Gopher Tortoise Council (www.gophertortoisecouncil.org)
Anyone who cares about wild indigo conservation should consider joining this group. They do an excellent job working to assist the tortoises and their critical habitat, which of course is equally critical to the eastern indigo.

Please read the following message sent to me by a tortoise conservationist. Seems we are at a critical point in Florida habitat conservation:

Dear Fellow Turtle Conservationists:

The decline of the gopher tortoise and loss of its upland habitat has become a conservation crisis in Florida. Although the State of Florida lists the gopher tortoise as a Species of Special Concern with harvest prohibited since 1988, tortoise populations continue to decline due to habitat loss and direct mortality as a result of commercial and real estate development.
The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation (FFWCC) has jurisdiction over protecting gopher tortoises and is legally required to ensure long term viability of the gopher tortoise in Florida. Currently, the FWC allows developers to obtain “incidental take” permits to destroy gopher tortoises and their habitat on development sites. This means they can directly kill tortoises by bulldozing, etc if they pay a fee to the FFWCC to purchase gopher tortoise habitat elsewhere. (only 15-20% of the area that they are destroying). This happens frequently in all Florida Counties. The developers can also choose to relocate tortoises to another site where they often wander off the relocation site and are killed on roads or die from disease. These “management options” have been in place since the early 1990’s but it is clear that the management plan is not working and the gopher tortoise is in greater jeopardy than it was just 10 years ago. Regional extinctions are very possible in the next 10 years if something does not change quickly. The FWC’s own biologists have estimated that tortoise populations in Florida have declined greater than 50% over the last three generations and loss of > 80% of its habitat in the last 100 years.
In the next few months, the FFWCC will be evaluating the gopher tortoise management plan and the policy of incidental take permits and relocation. They will also consider uplisting the gopher tortoise to a “Threatened” species in Florida.
Powerful development interest in Florida are fighting to prevent further protection and are even proposing down listing the tortoise to take it completely off the protected list!
HERE IS WHAT YOU CAN DO IMMEDIATELY:
Email or write Ken Haddad, Executive Director of the Florida Fish and
Wildlife Conservation Commission (address and email below) to demand the
following
1. FFWCC immediately uplist the gopher tortoise to “Threatened” status 2.
Immediately issue a moratorium on all “incidental take” permits 3. Require
greater protection of gopher tortoise populations in the new management
plan, with greater emphasis on protecting existing tortoise
populations rather than relocation
4. Join the Gopher Tortoise Council (www.gophertortoisecouncil.org)
If you can, please also write to the FFWCC Commissioners (listed below) who are politically appointed body that make these critical decisions on species listing and need to hear from people other than real estate developers.
The future of the gopher tortoise in Florida depends on generating unified public support that can change current policies and counter the money and influence of real estate developers.
Please forward this message to others that may be interested in helping with this issue. Thank you for your help.
Matt Aresco
Ken Haddad
Executive Director FFWCC
Florida Fish & Wildlife Conservation
Commission, 620 S. Meridian St.
Tallahassee, FL 32399-1600
E-Mail: ken.haddad@fwc.state.fl.us
(727) 896-8626
(727) 893-2947 Fax

Mr. David K. Meehan
St. Petersburg Commissioner FFWCC
P.O. Box 15707
St. Petersburg, FL 33733
E-mail: dkmeehan@bankersinsurance.com
Work (727) 823-4000 Ext. 4202
Fax: (727) 823-6518

Mr. John D. Rood
Jacksonville Commissioner FFWCC
3020 Hartley Road, Suite 300
Jacksonville, FL 32257
E-mail:
Work (904) 260-4488
Fax: (904) 880-7718

Dr. Edwin P. Roberts
Pensacola Commissioner/Chairman FFWCC
730 Warrington Road
Pensacola, FL 32506
E-mail: robertschiro@robertschiropractic.com
Work (850) 456-4788
Fax: (850) 456-6066

Mr. H.A. “Herky” Huffman
Deltona Commissioner FFWCC
821 DeBary Avenue
Daytona, FL 32725
E-mail: herkyfwcc@aol.com
Work (407) 668-5662
Fax: (407) 668-2361
Home: (407) 323-1360

Richard A. Corbett
Tampa Commissioner FFWCC

Sandra T. Kaupe
Palm Beach Commissioner FFWCC

Replies (5)

oldherper Oct 13, 2003 02:41 PM

,

Fred Albury Oct 13, 2003 03:46 PM

"

Carmichael Oct 13, 2003 07:30 PM

This makes great sense and its a win-win for everyone. I will start getting the word out to all of our indigo supporters and make sure they follow up with this group. Thanks for the info.

gila7150 Oct 15, 2003 08:48 AM

I'll send my emails today. In addition to preserving couperi habitat, I'd kind of miss seeing these guys on a regular basis in central FL. The rapid destruction of pine scrub, sandhill habitat in my area is just unbelievable.
Chris
Image

DeanAlessandrini Oct 15, 2003 09:38 AM

I posted this on the tortoise forum and it was completely ignored.

I don't get it.

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