Sunday, June 13, 2010

Protecting corridors there, threatening them here

The Whittier Daily News and other Los Angeles-area media are reporting that the U.S. Forest Service wants to bring lands that stretch from the Santa Monica Mountains to the San Gabriel Mountains "under federal protection and would study the possibilities of trail development, land acquisition and preservation of wildlife corridors that connect different sections of open space in the area."

At a recent event at Pasadena's Eaton Canyon Nature Center, U.S. Rep. Adam Schiff said: "These are incredible wild areas that are loosely connected corridors that allow for wildlife to pass through. If the areas become disconnected we lose those corridors."

The five-year study that was recently initiated to look into creation of the "Rim of the Valley Corridor" is not without its critics, but there still appears to be much to recommend the idea.

The agencies and water districts pushing the proposed San Gabriel River Discovery Center should take a page from these efforts. The Discovery Center, Lario Creek and other related projects, instead of enhancing the Whittier Narrows wildlife sanctuary and habitat connectivity, promise to destroy habitat and likely threaten habitat connectivity. (See the accompanying connectivity map, taken from the San Gabriel River Corridor Master Plan, and note where most corridors intersect .)

It's tragic that a few organizations charged with stewardship of our evermore scarce resources -- financial, ecological, recreational -- can be blind to reality and deaf to reason. But it's heartening to see that at least a few officials, such as Mr. Schiff, appear to be working for the good of the community and the environment.

1 comment:

  1. The map makes it obvious that the Whittier Narrows is the hub and belt-buckle of the not-national-forest, not seashore wildlife corridor through the L.A. Basin. What that and other maps do NOT show, unfortunately, is how difficult -ven scary- it is for HUMAN pedestrians, let alone their inured and controlled dogs and horses, let alone WILDLIFE, to get from one side to the other without wings! As the Narrows is the hub, it should be the PRIMARY FOCUS of making clear safe paths from the Puente to the Monterey Hills!

    RELIEF FROM CONCRETE is not at all responsible for my rants and faults, but y'all might get some useful links at my: "'Public' 'Protection' - Privileged Profiteering: Oil in Whittier & more" and "Rim of the Valley: Wildlife Corridor or Land-Grab?" posts at http://gremalkinsburrow.blogspot.com

    ReplyDelete