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Never-before seen video from Wildlands Inc. confirms strategy to save endangered species while securing Sacramento from flood

Posted by: Aqua Blog Maven on November 18, 2008 at 6:03 am

From Business Wire, this press release from Wildlands, Inc.:

When local, State and Federal agencies joined forces to improve Folsom Dam to protect California’s capital against the potential for a 200-year flood, an environmental issue stood in the way: a handsome but tiny (1/2-1 inch) beetle so rare even biologists who study it rarely see one. As a federally-listed threatened species living in vanishing shrubland along riverbanks, the Valley Elderberry Longhorn Beetle stood to lose one of its last refuges if the engineering work proceeded.

Enter Wildlands and its private conservation bank, a preserve for endangered species habitat developed in cooperation with the US Fish and Wildlife Service. Since 1991, the Rocklin, CA, company has provided public agencies and private companies with a third option when the need to preserve threatened wildlife habitat stands in the way of their projects. By establishing replacement habitat in advance of disruptive development and providing mitigation credits approved under State and Federal law, Wildlands’ habitat banks ensure both the future of development and of numerous endangered species.

Between fall 2007 and spring 2008, Wildlands transplanted 245 elderberry shrubs (many known to host larval-stage Valley Elderberry Longhorn Beetles) from the construction site of a new Folsom Dam spillway to Wildlands’ 5,000-acre Sacramento River Ranch habitat bank. Recently, Wildlands biologists confirmed the success of the mitigation strategy, documented in dramatic video footage of the Valley Elderberry Longhorn Beetles active in their new home.

Read more from Business Wire by clicking here. View the video by clicking here.

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