
Threatened and Endangered Species
Release #050-10
May 18, 2010
For Information Contact:
Jerry Feaser
717-705-6541
PGCNews@state.pa.us
GAME COMMISSION UNVEILS COMPREHENSIVE WEBSITE ON STATE ENDANGERED/THREATENED SPECIES
Students, educators and planners now have a definitive reference at their fingertips
HARRISBURG – The Pennsylvania Game Commission has published a new “Endangered and Threatened Species” section to its website to help educators, students, contractors, environmental planners and interested residents learn more about these species of greatest conservation need.
“In an effort to heighten awareness of
Pennsylvania’s endangered and threatened species and to provide educators and
their students the references they need to meet and exceed curriculum
requirements, the Game Commission has improved and updated its website’s
Endangered and Threatened Species Section,” said Carl G. Roe, agency executive
director. “The new and more extensive species accounts, as well as background
references, are the most striking ever produced by the agency. We are confident
they will help people become more excited about wildlife and more cognizant of
the factors that limit the presence of species of special concern in the
Commonwealth.
“Every account has been posted in a downloadable
format that educators can use for precision reproduction. Collectively, the
accounts are equivalent to a book, which is how the Commonwealth used to package
them. Now, educators and researchers can sift through the Game Commission’s
collection and gather or reproduce what they need from the best source for
information on Pennsylvania’s wild birds and mammals.”
This authoritative collection of species of concern
– written by state’s experts on these species – includes all of Pennsylvania’s
endangered and threatened species, one extirpated species and one extinct
species. Each account provides detailed species background, color photos, a
range map, recommendations for further reading and source information. They are
presented in an 8.5- by 11-inch Portable Document Format (PDF).
This revision of Pennsylvania’s endangered and
threatened wild bird and mammal accounts has occurred because more authoritative
profiles were developed through the creation of Pennsylvania’s Wildlife Action
Plan, a blueprint for managing low and declining populations of plants and
animals that states were required to develop to qualify for federal State
Wildlife Grant funding. These accounts were then customized with quality images
that were donated by nature photographers who were solicited to help.
“The Game Commission is indebted to the
photographers and conservation agencies who answered our call for help,” said
Joe Neville, director of the agency’s Bureau of Information and Education. “We
are fortunate to have their images to accentuate these important accounts.
There’s no better way to get acquainted with an animal than to look it over, or
see it in action. The photographers whose work supports these profiles provided
amazingly memorable stills that will surely endear Pennsylvanians to these
creatures.”
Students in grades 4, 7, 10 and 12 must meet
academic standards for environment and ecology as part of their curricular
requirements. Part of that study focuses on threatened, endangered and extinct
species, including what led to the decline of these species, and steps that can
be taken to protect their habitat and strengthen their populations.
“The more noticeable and detailed our endangered
species education and outreach become, the greater the program’s exposure will
be to Pennsylvanians today and tomorrow,” Neville said. “Delivering that message
through attractive, comprehensive accounts will surely excite teachers and
students about our species of greatest conservation need.”
Congress enacted the U.S. Endangered Species
Preservation Act of 1966, which gave broad authority and policy guidance to the
Secretary of the Interior to create a comprehensive program for the protection,
conservation and propagation of endangered species of fish and wildlife. Three
years later, Congress passed the Endangered Species Conservation Act of 1969 to
provide increased protection to threatened species and extended protection to a
wider variety of wildlife. The Endangered Species Act of 1973 reached all
animals, whereas the earlier act addressed only vertebrates, molluscs and
crustaceans. The law established authority for protection before the danger of
extinction becomes grave, a management concept that lives on in state Wildlife
Action Plans throughout America.
“Pennsylvania has come a long way in endangered and
threatened species management over the past 25 years, because of the Game
Commission’s commitment to these species of concern and through assistance from
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and conservation partners such as the Richard
King Mellon Foundation and Penn State University,” said Cal DuBrock, agency
Bureau of Wildlife Management director. “Recoveries such as those of the bald
eagle, peregrine falcon and osprey illustrate that helping these species can
right the decade upon decade of unfortunate consequence and contamination these
species endured.
“The Game Commission’s Wildlife Action Plan, with
assistance from the federal State Wildlife Grant Program, is helping us maintain
our focus on endangered and threatened species, as well as other species in
decline, to ensure common species don’t become uncommon, or in desperate need of
emergency room treatment. But because there are 467 species of wild birds and
mammals to manage in Pennsylvania, and the state’s landscape is altered daily,
there will never be a shortage of work to do.”
Photographers who donated photos to this effort
were Bob Moul; Chuck Gehringer; Noppadol Paothong, Missouri Department of
Conservation; Rob Criswell; Glen Tepke; Jake Dingel; Mike Lentz; Ivan Petrov;
Dave Hawkins; Alice Van Zoeren; Greg Lavaty; Ken Catania; Tom Robbins; Dr. Lloyd
Glenn Ingles photos from the Manzanita Project at California Academy of
Sciences; Megan Simon; John White; Jim Fenton; National Parks Service, U.S.
Dept. of the Interior; Smithsonian Institute, Book of Mammals; Roger Barbour
Collection; Richard Webster, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; and Dick Young.
To access the new Endangered and Threatened Species
Section of the Game Commission’s website –
www.pgc.state.pa.us,
click on “Endangered Species” under “Quick Clicks” in the right-hand column.