The Capital

Land trust saves key bird area in Crownsvill­e

71 acres of protected land is home to at- risk species

- By Rachael Pacella

An important bird habitat has been protected fromdevelo­pment as a landowner living along theNorth River tributary in Crownsvill­e has relinquish­ed the right to build on about 71acres that includeswo­ods and fields.

The Scenic Rivers Land Trust secured the easement using money from the Anne Arundel County Forestry and Forested

Land Protection Grant program is funded by administer­ed by the

Trust.

The land is a part of the South River Greenway, an “important bird area,” according to the National Audubon Society. TheNorth Branch tributary and the Bacon Ridge tributary are both surrounded by forest, and those forests meet at the confluence of the streams near Route 50, according to Audubon. It is one of the largest patches of forest in the county outside of the Patuxent Research Refuge. The National Audubon Society is a non

Program. That the county and Chesapeake Bay profit focusedonp­rotecting birds and their environmen­ts.

Birds that require large patches of forest can be found at the site. At least 18 species regularly breed in the area, and in 2007 three at- risk bird species were spotted: worm- eating warbler, Kentucky warbler and Louisiana waterthrus­h, according to Audobon.

The property includes 66 acres of mature forest and five acres of fields, which will be planted with trees. The site also consists of six acres of wetland and 2,500 linear feet of stream.

“The importance of our wild and open spaces is not lost on anyone this year. Clean air, healthy waterways, and places of beauty and relaxation are so important to the health of our communitie­s,” Scenic Rivers Executive Director Sarah Knebel said in a statement. “Thanks to the county’s commitment to protecting our forests and farms, as well as conservati­onminded landowners, we can continue to work together to build a resilient network of natural and open lands that will be there for us long into the future.”

Over the course of three decades, the land trust has secured conservati­on easements on 3,000 acres in the county.

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