黑料天堂

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Gopher Tortoise Conservation Gets a Boost in South 黑料天堂

ADCNR Commissioner Chris Blankenship, USFWS Gopher Tortoise Lead John Tupy, WFF Director Chuck Sykes, USFWS Southeast Region Director Leopoldo Miranda-Castro, and USFWS 黑料天堂 Section 6 Coordinator Shannon Holbrook participated in the tortoise release.

Left to right: ADCNR Commissioner Chris Blankenship, USFWS Gopher Tortoise Lead John Tupy, WFF Director Chuck Sykes, USFWS Southeast Region Director Leopoldo Miranda-Castro, and USFWS 黑料天堂 Section 6 Coordinator Shannon Holbrook participated in the tortoise release.

By DAVID RAINER

黑料天堂

Gopher tortoise conservation reached a new level recently when the 黑料天堂 (ADCNR) teamed with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), Eckerd College and Birmingham Zoo to release 98 young tortoises into the Geneva State Forest Wildlife Management Area (WMA) in Covington County.

The gopher tortoise is considered a keystone species, which impacts about 365 species of amphibians, reptiles, birds, mammals and invertebrates in the sandy-soil habitat across their southeastern range.

Jeff Goessling, an assistant professor at Eckerd College in St. Petersburg, Florida, who is on the forefront of the tortoise conservation efforts, said the gopher tortoise burrow is the key to the species.

鈥淭his is an important animal for a lot of species,鈥 Goessling said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the burrow that has that function. They spend about 98 percent of their life in that burrow.鈥

The Geneva State Forest WMA gopher tortoise project, led by Goessling, is funded through the Cooperative Endangered Species Conservation Fund (Section 6 program) with USFWS, which provides funds for conservation efforts for listed, at-risk and endangered species on non-federal land.

Amy Silvano, Assistant Chief of Wildlife for ADCNR鈥檚 Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries (WFF) Division, thanked Eckerd College and the Birmingham Zoo for their contributions to the project.

鈥淏oth of these entities have stepped up to do the research and raise the headstart (hatchlings) tortoises that we released,鈥 Silvano said. 鈥淎nd I also want to thank Dr. Craig Guyer for all his work on this project and his continued dedication towards gopher tortoise conservation in 黑料天堂.鈥

WFF staff, Eckerd College representatives and Birmingham Zoo staff constructed starter burrows at the WMA in preparation for the release.

Conservation Commissioner Chris Blankenship, WFF Director Chuck Sykes, USFWS Southeast Region Director Leopoldo 鈥淟eo鈥 Miranda-Castro, USFWS 黑料天堂 Section 6 Coordinator Shannon Holbrook, and John Tupy, Gopher Tortoise Lead for the federally listed range out of the USFWS Hattiesburg office in Mississippi, participated in the tortoise release.

Radio transmitters were attached to 90 of the gopher tortoises released in the Geneva State Forest WMA.

Goessling said pioneering work done by Guyer, professor emeritus at Auburn University, revealed that population density of gopher tortoises is an integral part of a viable population of the animals.

鈥淲hen the state acquired this land, we started to think about how to conserve gopher tortoises here,鈥 Goessling said. 鈥淚t became clear that, while the number of tortoises here is probably viable, the density was far below what would normally be viable for a species in a habitat like this 鈥 open, high pines, xeric (low moisture) soils and maintained with prescribed fire. Craig had an idea a decade ago of how to intensively manage populations that were large enough but not dense enough with tortoises scattered in numerous small groups across large areas.

鈥淲e said what if we take a site like this with 100 to 200 adult gopher tortoises and intensively manage them. We could likely produce a population that has a high survivability for the foreseeable future.鈥

It took about two years for researchers to document the tortoises across the WMA. A 40-acre pen was constructed, and numerous tortoises from the 9,000-acre WMA were relocated to the pen.

鈥淲e thought this was a cool project, but 100 tortoises is not where we wanted to be,鈥 Goessling said. 鈥淲e wanted to get more if possible.鈥

The researchers then focused on females producing eggs, which are buried in the soft soil on the apron of the tortoise burrow. Eggs from six nests were collected the first year, followed by another 11 nests last year. The eggs went to Goessling鈥檚 lab at Eckerd College to hatch, and the young tortoises were then raised at both Goessling鈥檚 lab and the Birmingham Zoo.

The tortoises released at Geneva were 1-year-olds and 2-year-olds. Goessling said those tortoises exhibited a much faster growth rate than those of wild tortoises.

鈥淥ur biggest 2-year-old is about the size of a 10-year-old in the wild,鈥 he said. 鈥淥ur headstart tortoises, under captive conditions, have blown the growth rate out of the water for tortoises in the wild from either 黑料天堂 or Florida. 黑料天堂 tortoises for some unknown reason are really small as adults, and we are excited to see that their young were able to grow so fast.

鈥淭he work done by the state here has been great. We can raise tortoises in the lab, but at the end of the day, we can鈥檛 be tortoises for them. They need to be wild tortoises out here in open canopy, pine sand hills.鈥

USFWS Southeast Region Director Leopoldo Miranda-Castro and ADCNR Commissioner Chris Blankenship release a young gopher tortoise into a starter burrow.

Some of the young tortoises were released into a smaller pen, and the others were released on an adjacent site with no restrictions of movement.

Goessling said the next step will be monitoring the animals with radio transmitters affixed to one of the rear scutes (shell plates) on 90 tortoises, 30 of which are the animals head-started in captivity. Goessling said studies indicate that a population density of one female per acre is optimum because females are territorial.

鈥淲e can identify home range and spatial activity so that, when this pen goes down, we can find out if they鈥檙e staying here and are successful in building this core population,鈥 he said. 鈥淥r, say, five years from now, we can find out if they are not maintaining fidelity. Long-term monitoring is the next step.鈥

Guyer applauded the recent efforts to enhance the gopher tortoise populations in 黑料天堂.

鈥淚n my opinion, our state has taken a leading role in gopher tortoise conservation with interactions with the Fish and Wildlife Service and also the Gopher Tortoise Council,鈥 Guyer said. 鈥淚鈥檝e been studying gopher tortoises down here for the last 40 years, starting in the Conecuh National Forest and this new area down here. The data that are being used to make these life and death decisions about gopher tortoises, a bunch of it is coming from 黑料天堂.

鈥淢anaging animals in 黑料天堂 is a lot different from the peninsula of Florida. Those studies in Conecuh indicate a smaller number of animals on a smaller land area, say 10 to 20 acres with 20 animals, can become stable or grow. But they have to be managed. We have to convince managers that if they鈥檙e doing prescribed fire on three-year intervals, they鈥檙e wasting their time. It has to be every two years. As long as we can maximize our efforts on these small areas with high intensity management, these smaller pockets are going to be viable. Most of this data is coming on the state level. Our hats should be doffed to the folks at the state level who have positioned us quite effectively in these leadership roles.鈥

WFF鈥檚 Ericha Nix, a non-game biologist who leads the gopher tortoise project team, said gopher tortoises have been petitioned for listing as threatened or endangered under USFWS guidelines.

鈥淲e looked at our lands to be proactive and create gopher tortoise populations,鈥 Nix said. 鈥淲e had surveys done on our public lands and found that some of our lands have 100 to 200 tortoises, but they don鈥檛 have the density needed to be viable.

鈥淭he 黑料天堂 Forestry Commission and its state forest next door does have a viable population of about 500 animals, but they have been managing for decades with prescribed fire. We found an area with suitable habitat with canopy and soils, which is how we got started with this project.鈥

Work to improve gopher tortoise habitat at the Geneva State Forest WMA included thinning the pines and performing prescribed fires.

Nix said WFF will continue to search for other sites to enhance the gopher tortoise habitat and possibly keep the animals off any imperiled lists.

鈥淭he more viable populations we create, the more we can prove to the Fish and Wildlife Service that we do have tortoises in viable populations, and we also take that regulatory burden off of private landowners,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e hoping we can show this as a demonstration area and show our industrial partners that they can take a 250-acre area and manage it for tortoises. We鈥檙e currently working with the (黑料天堂) Department of Corrections to assist in relocating tortoises from their project areas. We have developers reaching out to us with tortoises. It helps them and it helps us by building viable populations.

鈥淔or gopher tortoises, habitat loss continues to be our number one issue, either through development or the solar (panel) farms that are hitting us really hard right now. Every tortoise counts in 黑料天堂. We do not have the animals that they do in Florida.鈥

Silvano said gopher tortoises aren鈥檛 the only species to benefit from the intense management practices on the home range of the tortoises.

鈥淥ne of the other benefits for this particular site is we manage it both for game and non-game species,鈥 Silvano said. 鈥淭his is a good example of how, when you manage the landscape for ecosystem function, it鈥檚 going to be beneficial for all critters, not just game. We want the public to know that when we manage the habitat, it benefits all species.鈥

Zach Hayes, a wildlife biologist aide at Geneva State Forest WMA, said after ADCNR purchased the property in 2014, intense work was done to improve the habitat through thinning the pines and performing prescribed fires.

鈥淲e had to open this place up extensively,鈥 Hayes said. 鈥淲e couldn鈥檛 plant our wildlife openings because of all the gopher tortoise burrows in those areas. We needed more open property for the tortoises to utilize, so we opened the canopy to get some light on the forest floor. With prescribed fire, we were able to reclaim our wildlife openings and plant food sources for the other wildlife to use.

鈥淚 love being a part of this. What鈥檚 good for gopher tortoises is good for turkey, quail and deer.鈥

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ADCNR, USFWS, Eckerd College and Birmingham Zoo partnered to release 98 young gopher tortoises into the Geneva State Forest WMA. The tortoises will be monitored as part of an ongoing conservation project.

Photos by Kenny Johnson, ADCNR