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US group joins push to identify key bird habitats
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USA: November 30, 2001


SAN FRANCISCO - A national environmental group designated some 70 U.S. sites as critical bird habitats this week, joining a global effort to identify and protect areas seen as crucial to sustaining the world's endangered bird populations.


The National Audubon Society, in conjunction with the British group BirdLife International, said identification of the new "important bird areas" could spur local groups to begin lobbying for their protection.

"The easy part is identifying them. The hard part is protecting them," Audubon President John Flicker told Reuters.

Among the U.S. sites designated on Wednesday was the San Francisco Bay area, where once extensive wetlands have been overtaken by development.

"Every year one million birds rely on the wetlands and associated habitats of the San Francisco Bay region during their migration along the Pacific Flyway," Flicker said, referring to the coastal strip reaching from Alaska to Chile where many migratory birds travel.

In the Bay Area, Audubon has sought to raise money to restore some 100,000 acres (40,500 hectares) of destroyed wetlands to revive what is the largest estuary along the entire Pacific coast.

Other critical bird habitats in the United States include regions ranging from the Commanche National Grassland in Colorado and Georgia's Okenfenokee National Wildlife Refuge to the Jamaica Bay Complex in New York City's borough of Queens and the C&O Canal running through Washington D.C.

"America's birds are in trouble, and this is a chance for individuals to make a difference," Flicker said.

The global program, which is also under way in Europe, Africa and the Middle East, uses local volunteers to find and identify important bird habitats.

Nominated sites will be rigorously reviewed by leading scientists, and then endorsed by BirdLife International - in hopes that the new designation will become an important factor in any future land use decisions.


REUTERS NEWS SERVICE

Reuters



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