Chattanooga Times Free Press

Area conservati­on projects share $1.3M grant

- BY MARK PACE STAFF WRITER

Projects in the greater Chattanoog­a area have taken lead roles this month in a national effort to conserve habitat on the Cumberland Plateau.

The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation granted $1.3 million to a range of nonprofits and a state agency focused on restoring the Cumberland Plateau. The grants are part of the foundation’s annual Cumberland Plateau Stewardshi­p Fund that will restore, enhance and protect shortleaf pine and riparian forests and in-stream habitats in Alabama, Kentucky and Tennessee. Five of seven projects that received grants will take place, at least partially, in Southeast Tennessee or Northeast Alabama.

The Cumberland Plateau stretches from Franklin County, Marion County and the western edge of Hamilton County up through Sequatchie, Bledsoe and Cumberland counties and north through eastern Kentucky.

“From our standpoint, for that whole region, the Cumberland Plateau is one amazing place for wildlife,” said Jay Jensen, the foundation’s southern regional office director. “The biodiversi­ty is off the charts.”

The grants will engage more than 1,400 private landowners through outreach and assistance and will be matched to bring the total to $2.6 million. The groups will largely work with landowners of large properties to teach proper land management skills.

The projects will focus on restoring shortleaf pine and oak communitie­s on the plateau. The habitats allow for natural sunlight and support the area’s historical landscape.

Their ecosystems have dwindled due to forest conversion, a lack of prescribed fire, disease and pest infestatio­n. That loss converted much of the land to heavily forested area and contribute­d to the decline of bird species such as Bachman’s sparrow, brown-headed nuthatch and prairie warbler.

“You let a fallow piece of ground go for a long time with no management, it’s going to go back to forest in Tennessee,” said Tim Phelps, with the Tennessee Department of Agricultur­e Division of Forestry. “Any acre of ground in Tennessee will often want to revert to forest if given enough time.”

The Division of Forestry received $200,000 to expand prescribed burning on privately owned shortleaf pine forests. The group will be working with landowners across the Cumberland Plateau, including in Southeast Tennessee.

The Alabama Forestry Associatio­n received two of the seven grants awarded by the National Fish and Wildlife Federation. Their $150,000 grant will help establish 400 acres of shortleaf pine and enhance an additional 2,200 acres of existing habitat with prescribed burning and invasive species removal in Northeast Alabama, including Jackson and DeKalb counties. A $300,000 grant, also awarded to the Alabama Forestry Associatio­n, will be used to help riparian forest habitats — forested areas adjacent to bodies of water — and benefit freshwater mussels and fish.

The two other local projects are a $100,000 grant to The Nature Conservanc­y to restore and enhance riparian forests and in-stream habitats and a $200,000 grant that will be used for shortleaf pine ecosystem restoratio­n by the The Forest Stewards Guild to benefit songbirds and game species, such as wild turkey.

The National Fish and Wildlife Foundation grant program has been around for about five years. The foundation saw it as a combinatio­n of need and opportunit­y, Jensen said. The group wanted to aid conservati­on efforts in the region and was approached by a potential investor wanting to jumpstart the work.

That investor — renewable fiber-based packaging, pulp and paper product manufactur­er Internatio­nal Paper — worked with the foundation to bring other investors on board including the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e, US. Fish and Wildlife Service, American Forest Foundation and Altria Group — one of the world’s largest producers and marketers of tobacco and cigarettes.

“We are pleased to support these seven conservati­on grants that will establish and enhance more than 9,700 acres of forestland within the Cumberland Plateau,” said Tom Cleves, Internatio­nal Paper’s vice president of global citizenshi­p. “By working together with organizati­ons that share our commitment to responsibl­e forest stewardshi­p, we will continue to ensure healthy and productive forest ecosystems for future generation­s.”

Other projects include work by the Cumberland River Compact to improve farming practices and by the Amphibian and Reptile Conservanc­y to restore forested riparian buffers and implement additional conservati­on practices on private agricultur­al lands.

Contact Mark Pace with questions, comments, concerns or story tips at mpace@timesfreep­ress.com or 423-757-6659. Follow him on Twitter @themarkpac­e and on Facebook at Chattanoog­aOutdoorsT­FP.

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