Santa Fe New Mexican

States retrofit highways to be safer for wildlife

- By Jennifer Oldham

COLLEGIATE PEAKS SCENIC BYWAY, Colo. — U.S. Highway 285 was once a death zone for the dwindling herds of elk and mule deer on Colorado’s Western Slope. But today it offers a lifeline, helping them travel from their summer range high in the mountains to winter foraging grounds along the Arkansas River.

For the past year, a tunnel dipping under three lanes of speeding traffic has beckoned. And as frost descended recently on subalpine meadows and glittering-gold aspen, a huge bull elk, measuring at least nine feet from antlers to hoofs, entered the structure ever so cautiously. Infrared cameras on both ends captured his meandering.

“Yes!” exulted Mark Lawler, an environmen­tal specialist with the state transporta­tion department, sitting under the 25-foot-wide tunnel

arch and watching images pop up on his laptop. The ground there was marked by coyote, deer and even squirrel tracks, more proof of success. But Lawler was focusing on the elk’s safe passage. He “won’t be hit by someone on the highway.”

The $3.5 million project is one of several planned for Colorado’s ever more crowded roads, on which some 4,000 bears, bighorn sheep, coyotes and myriad other animals died last year. The cost of the carnage exceeded $80 million, according to state officials.

Across the country, as developmen­t continues to encroach on natural areas, wildlifeve­hicle collisions are taking a massive toll. More than 1.9 million animal-collision insurance claims were filed in fiscal 2019, a State Farm report found, with some researcher­s estimating the annual price tag of the resulting human fatalities, wildlife mortality, injuries, vehicle damage and other costs at almost $10 billion.

Yet advances in satellite tracking technology are helping biologists to better understand how many animals rely on corridors — strips of land that link habitats — and how wildlife crossings over and under roads are essential to reconnect these shrinking settings. Federal and state officials, conservati­onists and landowners are now partnering across borders on remedies.

“Our ecosystems are in crisis due to habitat loss, deforestat­ion and, of course, climate change,” said Sen. Tom Udall, D-N.M., who in May introduced a Wildlife Corridors Conservati­on bill with bipartisan support. The measure would provide federal land managers the authority to establish corridors, set aside $78.5 million in funding, in part for regional projects, and order the creation of a federal wildlife connectivi­ty database.

“The science is clear that corridors help protect our most vulnerable species,” Udall said in an interview.

Research and video feeds show that specially designed crossings have protected scores of pronghorn antelope in Wyoming, panthers in Florida, mule deer in Nevada, moose along “Slaughter Row” in Utah and grizzly and black bears in Montana from oncoming cars and trucks. Mortality dropped by as much as 90 percent, studies show.

Beyond maintainin­g population­s, such projects ensure that ailing ecosystems retain biodiversi­ty, scientists note. The strategy works for flora, too. A new study based on a decadeslon­g experiment that restored longleaf pine savanna in South Carolina found that fewer plants went extinct in connected habitats.

“We need to create, or support, maintainin­g wildlife movement and connectivi­ty at landscape scale because it has long-term genetic consequenc­es,” said Rob Ament, road ecology program manager at the Western Transporta­tion Institute at Montana State University, who is consulting on a project in Asia that will benefit rhinos, tigers and elephants. “We built our interstate system in the 1950s and 1960s before we knew this, and now we must retrofit it to connect landscapes across major highways.”

Under a 2018 secretaria­l order, the Interior Department is funding work in 11 Western

“When you have two areas that promote wildlife movement from forest to forest, region to region, and state to state, it sets a strong precedent. We are hoping this can be a Westwide model.” Jeremy Romero, National Wildlife Federation

states to identify wildlife corridors and what threatens them and to create plans and partnershi­ps to preserve such areas. Casey Stemler, a senior adviser in the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, recalls asking those states to list the key risks to the corridors, “and they all said highways.” A Senate transporta­tion bill includes $250 million for a five-year wildlifecr­ossing pilot program.

New Mexico and Colorado officials are collaborat­ing with tribes, the National Wildlife Federation, sportsmen’s organizati­ons and landowners pushing for special management areas to protect corridors across three national forests — Rio Grande in Colorado and Carson and Santa Fe in New Mexico. Collective­ly, they represent one of the least fragmented wildlife landscapes in the continenta­l United States, with elk, bighorn sheep, mule deer, pronghorns, lynx, black bears and cougars traveling among them.

“When you have two areas that promote wildlife movement from forest to forest, region to region, and state to state, it sets a strong precedent,” said Jeremy Romero, the federation’s regional connectivi­ty coordinato­r. “We are hoping this can be a Westwide model.”

States are independen­tly prioritizi­ng wildlife corridors and crossings, too. Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, a Democrat, in March signed legislatio­n directing her transporta­tion and game and fish agencies to work with tribes in using GPS data from wildlife fitted with electronic collars to identify roads that hinder migration. A plan listing the top proposed corridor projects is to be submitted to the legislatur­e by January.

And under an executive order from Colorado Gov. Jared Polis, in August, his natural resources department is studying migration patterns in advance of developing new policies. “We want to ensure conservati­on of big-game winter range so we can grow our outdoor recreation economy and protect the diversity of our wildlife,” Polis, a Democrat, said in a recent interview.

Meanwhile, engineers in Southern California are designing the world’s largest animal crossing. The $87 million overpass, which will span a 10-lane Los Angeles freeway, is a bid to save the region’s mountain lions by reconnecti­ng habitats in the Santa Monica Mountains with those to the north. Other creatures also are expected to traverse it.

Roadway ecologists emphasize crossings’ cost effectiven­ess. Every vehicle-elk collision avoided meant $17,483 per kilometer per year in car repairs and medical expenses averted, a 2009 Montana study found. With moose, the figure jumped to $30,760.

“A lot of these structures, we’ve done the math on them, and they can effectivel­y pay for themselves in a decade,” said Hall Sawyer, a research biologist at West Inc., an environmen­tal consulting firm in Cheyenne, Wyo.

Key to crossings’ success are fences that direct wildlife toward the site and structure, metal guards that keep animals off roads at intersecti­ons, and earthen ramps that allow them to exit.

A couple of hours west of Colorado Springs, the project along Highway 285 has two miles of eight-foot fencing on either side of the asphalt to funnel animals into a trio of box culverts constructe­d in the late 1960s. Its location near the small town of Buena Vista is not happenstan­ce: Lawler compared law enforcemen­t crash data on injuries from wildlife-vehicle collisions and carcass removal informatio­n collected by maintenanc­e crews, then talked with wildlife managers in the area and coordinate­d with private landowners.

The effort paid off: The bodies of elk and mule deer no longer litter the road. Instead, Lawler watches remotely as they amble with little danger through the tunnel.

The state transporta­tion department plans to hire a firm next spring to track data from the structure’s cameras and better quantify the crossing’s effectiven­ess.

“It would be great if someday wildlife treatments are seen as stand-alone projects,” said Lawler, glancing up at the piñon- and juniper-covered hillside where animals case the underpass for safety. “I can see that day coming.”

 ?? MATTHEW STAVER FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Mark Lawler, an environmen­tal specialist with the Colorado Department of Transporta­tion, consults images of a tunnel created for wildlife’s safe passage beneath three lanes of speeding traffic.
MATTHEW STAVER FOR THE WASHINGTON POST Mark Lawler, an environmen­tal specialist with the Colorado Department of Transporta­tion, consults images of a tunnel created for wildlife’s safe passage beneath three lanes of speeding traffic.
 ?? PHOTOS BY MATTHEW STAVER/FOR THE WASHINGTON POST ?? Elk stand near a tunnel under U.S. Highway 285 in Colorado.
PHOTOS BY MATTHEW STAVER/FOR THE WASHINGTON POST Elk stand near a tunnel under U.S. Highway 285 in Colorado.
 ??  ?? Tracks provide evidence that animals use the $3.5 million tunnel project under U.S. Highway 285 in Colorado.
Tracks provide evidence that animals use the $3.5 million tunnel project under U.S. Highway 285 in Colorado.

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