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Photo by Tyler Abbott Wyoming toad released under the Safe Harbor Agreement
 
| 해상도: 1984x1488
파일크기: 2204723 Bytes
촬영일: 2004:06:08 02:42:58
사진기: C720UZ           (OLYMPUS OPTICAL CO.,LTD)
F number: f/4.5
Exposure: 1/400 sec
Focal Length: 5120/100
등록시간: 2008:02:28 21:50:51
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Photo by Tyler Abbott Wyoming toad released under the Safe Harbor Agreement
 
 Wyoming Toad Safe Harbor 
     Agreement Success Story
 As a result 
     of a cooperative effort among the Laramie Rivers Conservation District, the 
     Buford Foundation and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, in 2005, over 
     6,000 endangered Wyoming toad tadpoles and 15 adult toads were released on 
     private property owned by the Buford Foundation in Albany County, Wyo. This 
     reintroduction is a result of a safe harbor agreement with Laramie River 
     Conservation District signed in August 2004, and numerous hours of work 
     between all the partners in the process including the Laramie River 
     Conservation District, privately run Buford Foundation, Natural Resource 
     Conservation Service, the Service’s own Partner, Refuges, Fisheries and 
     Ecological Services programs and the Wyoming State Game and Fish Department. 
     The safe harbor agreement allows the Service, with permission of enrolled 
     landowners, to release the critically endangered Wyoming toad onto private 
     land to help recover the species while at the same time providing the 
     landowner with assurances that their activities will not be constrained by 
     the Endangered Species Act. As part of the agreement, a permit to enhance 
     the toad’s survival is issued which authorizes incidental take of Wyoming 
     toads resulting from agricultural-related activities like crop cultivation, 
     livestock grazing, etc., on enrolled property as well as adjacent 
     neighboring lands. Conservation benefits for the toad under a safe harbor 
     agreement include finding out more about Wyoming toad ecology in general, 
     and specifically, maintaining, enhancing and/or creating habitat and new 
     populations, expanding the current range of the Wyoming toad and decreasing 
     habitat fragmentation within its range. In 2006, another landowner has 
     stepped forward to become part of this umbrella agreement for the Wyoming 
     toad. This property, currently a fully functional cattle operation will be 
     enrolling 40 acres to help recover the Wyoming toad. We also have an 
     additional landowner interested in signing up in 2007. Because the majority 
     of suitable habitat is on private lands, this Safe Harbor Agreement and 
     associated Enhancement of Survival Permit are critical to recovering this 
     critically endangered species. This SHA was highlighted by the Service at 
     the recent 2005 National Association of Conservation Districts in Houston, 
     Texas.
 
 Photo by Tyler Abbott Wyoming toad released under the Safe Harbor Agreement
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