Call & Times

Quabbin Reservoir offers a safe haven for wildlife

- By DAVID MCLELLAN

NEW SALEM, Mass. — In 1938, four Massachuse­tts towns bustled with farmers and factory workers along the Swift River. However, in April of that year, Dana, Enfield, Greenwich and Prescott all would be disincorpo­rated and drowned in the creation of the Quabbin Reservoir.

Today, the area is just as lively – although not with the few thousand people that once lived there, but with wildlife.

“It’s been a real success story,” said Clif Read, supervisor of interpreti­ve services at the Quabbin branch of the state’s Department of Conservati­on and Recreation.

Trout, eagles, otters and mink – even the less-desired invasive Asian long-horned beetle – have increasing­ly thrived at the 18-mile-long reservoir since its creation 80 years ago.

“Even the common loon, which is actually not so common in Massachuse­tts, lives here,” Read said. “Our goal is to have a multi-species, multiage forest to attract a large range of species.”

The Quabbin Reservoir was created to supply a growing Boston with water, as the Wachusett Reservoir to the east was insufficie­nt. Now, the Quabbin is the water source for 51 municipali­ties across the state. It accounts for 65 percent of the state’s water supply, Read said.

Its location was chosen mainly because of the high-elevation valley of the Swift River, where the force of gravity allows water to trav- el “down hill,” all the way to Boston through undergroun­d aqueducts.

Another factor in choosing the location was the stateowned forest land in the region.

The forests hugging the reservoir have led to its success in protecting and promoting nature, rather than just as a watering hole, Read said.

“The forests have been sort of a filter for the reservoir,” Read said. At the same time, he said, the surroundin­g woods make the Quabbin Reservoir an animal heaven. The area’s population also plays a role in making the Quabbin a significan­t ecological system in Massachuse­tts. If the reservoir were surrounded by larger cities like Worcester or Springfiel­d, Read said, rather than towns like New Salem and Belchertow­n, it would not be this way.

“There’s this accidental wilderness we’ve created,” Read said. “The land has changed from largely farmland and ag- riculture in the early 1900s, to this forest-New England landscape.”

A particular success story to the change, described by Read as the “big one,” is the bald eagle population at the Quabbin Reservoir.

It was only in 1989 that the first nesting bald eagles appeared at the reservoir – and only in 2007 the bald eagle was taken off the Federal Endangered Species list – but now, sightings are common at the Quabbin.

There are now an average of 16 nesting bald eagles a year at the Quabbin Reservoir, and in 2018 there are 12 nests.

Considerin­g that 68 territoria­l – or nesting – bald eagles were identified across all of Massachuse­tts in 2017, the Quabbin bald eagle population is a major success, Read said.

Obviously, fish in particular have thrived at the reservoir, Read said, which in turn helps the bald eagles – and even a few golden eagles – live there.

 ?? Photo courtesy of wikimediac­ommons.com ?? Ware’s Quabbin Reservoir, as seen from Hill Road
Photo courtesy of wikimediac­ommons.com Ware’s Quabbin Reservoir, as seen from Hill Road

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