Maine Audubon Society
By Barbara Charry, 22 Jan 1997
Since its inception in 1843 as the Portland Society of Natural History,
the Maine Audubon Society has become one of New England's leading regional
organizations for environmental advocacy and education. An independent
nonprofit organization supported by 6500 member households, Maine Audubon
Society is dedicated to the protection, conservation, and enhancement of
Maine's ecosystems through the promotion of individual understanding and
actions.
The Maine Audubon Society is a community of people who share an appreciation
of Maine's wildlife and outdoors, a concern for the stewardship of its
natural resources, and a commitment to a clean environment. We want to
ensure that future generations have a chance to enjoy and benefit from
these assets. We'll help you get involved. Join us and become part of the
solution.
Maine Audubon Society's Northern Forest Conservation Plan and GIS
Current development trends and forest practices are placing Maine's
unique northern forest, 15 million acres of remote forested land, at risk.
Due to the threats facing this region, Maine Audubon Society has dedicated
much of its conservation efforts during the last five years toward ensuring
a sustainable future for the region. Our proposed solutions are concentrated
around three critical strategies: conserving Maine's most valuable forestlands;
surrounding conserved lands with well-managed private forests; and supporting
healthy rural economies. Maine Audubon first acquired a GIS for its Northern
Forest Project in the spring of 1994. Environmental Systems Research Institute,
Inc. (ESRI) donated software and training, and a grant from another source
provided us with the funding to purchase the initial hardware, except for
a plotter which is still needed. Maine Audubon has been using GIS continuously
since then (particularly ArcView) to analyze data on the ecological and
recreational resources of the Northern Forest; to identify and prioritize
Maine Wildland Conservation Areas; to produce small (8 1/2" x 11")
maps to communicate Maine Audubon's conservation plan for the Northern
Forest with the public and stakeholders; and to produce large (3' x 4')
maps for outreach with specific groups of landowners, stakeholders, local
citizens and officials. We are currently revising the maps with updated
information gathered through our outreach efforts and see the revisions
as a continuing process. We have found GIS to be a key tool in addressing
and involving the public in the statewide issue of the future of the Northern
Forest and in communicating the issues facing the forest with the forest
communities, stakeholders, government officials and broader public. Our
goal is to ensure that the future of the Northern Forest is determined
by careful planning for all values—ecological, recreational, economic--the
forest contributes to Maine and the northeastern United States. Without
careful planning now, the largest remote forested area in the northeast
may not be here in 50 years. GIS allows us to visually, and dramatically,
demonstrate the abundant resources found in the Northern Forest and to
explain the serious consequences of development, logging and recreational
use pressures to those who may not otherwise grasp them. GIS is particularly
effective because it replicates the way people actually encounter the outdoors,
experiencing many things at once, making it possible to draw the connections
at public meetings. Currently, we are running our GIS on a Pentium PC 133
megahertz with 32 MB RAM and 2 gig hard drive, and are using ArcView GIS
and PC ARC/INFO. The data we have purchased or created and are currently
using includes, the 1:100,000 scale transportation, hydro and wetland coverage
for the state; a statewide large land ownership layer; unorganized township
deer wintering areas; Natural Areas Program rare plant and natural communities
information; bald eagle essential habitat; rare animal information; canoe
waterways; high value fishing rivers and lakes; boat ramps, campsites and
campgrounds; waterfalls and gorges; airports; snowmobile trails and hiking
trails.
Maine Wildland Conservation Areas
Maine Audubon Society is working to locate the best areas for conservation, commercial
forestry, and rural development in Maine's Northern Forest. Amidst the
15 million acres of Northern Forest in Maine, we have identified five Maine
Wildland Conservation Areas (MWCAs) totaling 4.3 million acres that host
the most valuable concentrations of ecological and recreational assets.
Maine Audubon's goal is to secure a future for valuable ecological and
recreational wildlands within each MWCA with conservation strategies that
enhance local economies and lifestyles. Each MWCA will be designed to ensure
the future integrity of large, undeveloped landscapes in Maine, to provide
opportunities for extended remote recreation, and to mimic natural processes
that we hope will sustain the biological diversity of the Northern Forest.
In addition, local communities will be encouraged to broaden their base
of economic support by drawing on the multiple resources and values found
within each MWCA.
Greater Baxter State Park MWCA
Although much has changed in the Maine woods since Thoreau's day, the Greater Baxter
State Park MWCA is still prized for its mountains, waterfalls, lakes, glacial
features, and old-growth forests. With many rare plants and animals, wetlands,
and low road density, this MWCA possesses high ecological, scenic, and
recreational values. Mt. Katahdin, Maine's highest mountain, supports a
large number of alpine plant species, several of which, such as the dwarf
willow and Lapland rosebay, are found nowhere else in the state. South
of Baxter lies Rainbow Lake, ranked as one of Maine's finest remote ponds.
This MWCA, composed of public reserves and managed private lands, offers
a diversity of outdoor adventures such as hiking, rafting and canoeing,
fishing, snowmobiling, and exploring remote backcountry and mountainous
areas. The West and East branches of the Penobscot River contain some of
the state's most scenic gorges and waterfalls and provide paddlers with
whitewater rapids and long stretches of undeveloped shorelines. Lastly,
this area supports a working forest that produces valuable forest products
critical to the local economy.
Upper St. John River MWCA
The Upper St. John River MWCA begins near the confluence of the St. John and
Allagash rivers and extends upstream to Baker Lake and the Canadian border,
including the watersheds of the Big and Little Black rivers. This MWCA
is an important timber-producing region, supplying wood to mills in Maine
and Quebec. In addition, the St. John River ecosystem is noted for its
rare and threatened plant species and offers visitors a high-quality recreational
experience in one of the most remote regions of the eastern United States.
More than 30 rare plants grow in this unique river ecosystem, most notably
the Furbish's lousewort, but also the St. John tansy, New England violet,
and northern painted cup. The Furbish's lousewort is found nowhere else
in the world, growing only along the ice-scoured banks of the undammed,
north-flowing St. John River. Recreationally, the St. John River trip is
prized by canoeists for its length and wild, remote character. With this
region's low road density and abundant scenic beauty, outdoor enthusiasts
can also hunt and fish, snowmobile, and photograph magnificent botanical
treasures and, perhaps, even the elusive lynx.
Downeast Lakes MWCA
The Downeast Lakes MWCA extends from the Narraguagus River northeast to the
St. Croix River near Vanceboro, and east to the East Machias River. This
region includes the watersheds and headwaters of four Class A rivers: the
Narraguagus, Pleasant, Machias, and East Machias. These nationally significant
rivers have been awarded the highest ranking a river can receive based
on natural and recreational values. In addition, all four rivers support
self-sustaining runs of the Atlantic salmon. Due to declines, however,
the Atlantic salmon populations in these rivers have recently been proposed
for listing as "threatened" under the Endangered Species Act.
The Downeast Lakes area is ecologically, geologically, and recreationally
rich. Its varied natural communities included vast upland forests, swamps,
bogs, rivers, lakes, and marshes which support an abundance of wildlife,
including a high concentration of nesting bald eagles and other rare species
such as the Tomah mayfly. More than any place in Maine, this geologically
significant area shows the work of the great continental glaciers. Eskers,
moraines, and outwash plains, deposited by the recent retreat of the Wisconsin-age
glacier, dominate the landscape. In addition, the abundance of extensive
peatlands, or heaths, formed by the region's cool, moist climate, is unique
in the East. The Great Heath, the largest peatland complex in Maine, covers
4,000 acres and harbors many unusual plants and animals.
Border Lakes MWCA
The Border Lakes MWCA is a working example of what Maine Audubon envisions
a MWCA to become. Public and private groups have worked cooperatively to
apply a variety of conservation measures to ensure that ecological resources
and recreational opportunities are not diminished, while encouraging sustainably
managed forests and focusing development in less sensitive areas. The forest
industry, large private landowners, the state, and federal government have
cooperated to protect important lands. The Rangeley Lakes Heritage Trust,
a local land trust, has been a key player in this process, working to protect
significant resources of the Rangeley Lakes region.
Western Mountains MWCA
The Western Mountains MWCA provides users with opportunities for a variety
of outdoor adventures. This area includes Flagstaff Lake and the mountainous
areas to the south and north, as well as much of the upper Moose River
watershed and Attean Pond, one of Maine's most picturesque lakes. This
island-studded pond is part of a river loop formed by the Moose River and
Holeb Pond and is prized by visitors for canoeing, fishing, and remote
camping. The Moose River is one of the least developed river corridors
in the Northeast. Mt. Abraham, Bigelow, and Sugarloaf mountains are among
the mountains included in this MWCA. The 35,000 acre Bigelow Preserve,
encompassing many peaks of the Bigelow Mountain range, features a mosaic
of wetlands, a 6-mile-long glacier-deposited esker (a long ridge of sand
and gravel), and fragile arctic-alpine plant species. Hikers and climbers
of Bigelow Mountain and Mt. Abraham can explore one of the few alpine-tundra
plant communities in the eastern United States.
Text and graphics: Maine Audubon Society
January 2, 1997
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