Keep South Carolina Wild

We can create jobs and prevent extinctions

Published in Post & Courier 06/29/21

We can create jobs and prevent extinctions

BY SARA GREEN AND COLLIN O’MARA

FILE/GRACE BEAHM ALFORD/STAFF

A monarch butterfly hangs onto its chrysalis after hatching in the butterfly house at Cypress Gardens in September.

Over the past year or so, South Carolinians have headed for the outdoors in greater numbers than ever before, exploring the Palmetto State from the Lowcountry to Sassafras Mountain. But even those of us who coped with the stress of the pandemic by spending time in nature may not be fully aware of the wildlife crisis quietly unfolding all around us. Scientists estimate that roughly one-third of America’s wildlife species are at an elevated risk of extinction. Here in South Carolina, the Department of Natural Resources has identified about 800 species of wildlife and plants in need of conservation action. The species at risk are found in every habitat and among all major groups of wildlife — from horseshoe crabs to wood storks.

The good news is that Congress is considering a bold, bipartisan bill that would go a long way to addressing the wildlife crisis while creating jobs in every state and bridging the political divide. The Recovering America’s Wildlife Act (H.R. 2773) — led by Debbie Dingell, DMich., and Jeff Fortenberry, R-Neb. — would direct $1.4 billion of existing federal revenue toward proactive, voluntary, locally led efforts to help fish and wildlife species in decline.

More than 180 representatives from both sides of the aisle cosponsored the bill in the last session.

If passed, the bill would send more than $14 million annually to South Carolina, which would use the money to help the 800 at-risk species by restoring habitat, removing invasive species, addressing wildlife diseases and improving water quality. The bill would also fund wildlife conservation efforts led by tribes, such as the ongoing efforts by the Catawba Indian Nation of South Carolina to restore habitat for the monarch butterfly and reintroduce the federally endangered Schweinitz’s sunflower to their tribal lands.

The Recovering America’s Wildlife Act provides additional funding for federally listed endangered species such as gopher tortoises and red-cockaded woodpeckers. But the main thrust of the bill is intended to prevent wildlife from needing the Endangered Species Act’s federal protections in the first place.

This type of proactive wildlife restoration can make a difference for people and wildlife. The diamondback terrapin was decimated by exploitation for turtle soup in the early 1900s. Threats today now include road mortality, drowning in crab traps and loss of nesting habitat. Coastal residents have a vested interest in restoring robust populations of diamondback terrapins, as they help maintain healthy marshes by feeding on periwinkle snails that can overgraze the marsh. Additionally, healthy marshes protect coastal communities from hurricane storm surges, and provide nursery grounds for shrimp, blue crabs and numerous fish. The diamondback terrapin is just one example of how proactive conservation is good for wildlife, good for taxpayers and good for business by maintaining a healthy ecosystem that feeds us and is crucial to our ecotourism industry.

A terrapin turtle is held by a volunteer as it prepares to be measured, weighed and examined during a Department of Natural Resources survey and tracking project in 2016.

The work funded by the Recovering America’s Wildlife Act will be guided by the state’s Wildlife Action Plan, which outlines the actions needed and describes the science behind these recommendations.

The Recovering America’s Wildlife Act would create high-quality jobs today while protecting our state’s wildlife heritage for tomorrow.

This session, we hope all of South Carolina’s congressional delegation from both sides of the aisle — including Sens. Lindsey Graham and Tim Scott — will champion this groundbreaking bill and help it become the law of the land.

Sara Green is the executive director of the South Carolina Wildlife Federation. Collin O’Mara is the president and CEO of the National Wildlife Federation.

Published in Post & Courier 06/29/21

SC State Budget Update 2021


SCWF Government Relations Manager, Trip King

The House-Senate Conference Committee on H.4100, the state appropriations bill, met on June 17 to finalized the Conference Report on the FY 2021-2022 state budget. The Conference Report was adopted by the General Assembly on Monday, June 21, by a vote of 39-5 in Senate and 108-6 in the House. The bill was ratified and sent to the Governor for his consideration. The state’s fiscal year begins July 1. Two items in the budget of particular interest to SCWF were funding for the newly created Office of Resilience and SC Conservation Bank. SCWF advocated for the establishment of the Office of Resilience, which was created in 2021 after a two year push, and we successfully advocated for adequate first-year funding for the agency and the two resilience accounts within the agency during this session’s budget debate. And, SCWF has always advocated for additional funding for the Conservation Bank and we are thankful that the Legislature significantly increased the Bank’s ability to award land conservation and protection grants in the upcoming year’s budget.

Here is a breakdown in specific funding for those two state agencies:

Office of Resilience

$  2,036,700  Program Administration and Operations

$44,000,000  Resilience Reserve Fund (hazard mitigation, statewide resilience planning, disaster recovery, etc…)

$  6,000,000  Resilience Revolving Loan Fund (voluntary buyout program of repetitively flooded properties)

$       80,000  IT and Furniture

___________

$52,116,700   Total

In addition, $100M in federal funds allocated for current disaster recovery efforts was transferred from the Department of Administration to the OOR which will now administer those programs.

Conservation Bank

$  9,070,134  Agency FY21-22 Baseline (recurring)

$  9,000,000  Non-recurring funds per proviso

$  2,564,400  Other Funds (Carry Forward)

$  2,435,600  Savannah Harbor Expansion Project (Mitigation)

$10,000,000  Other Funds (National Coastal Wetland Conservation Funds)

__________

$33,070,134

By comparison, in the FY 2019-2020 appropriations bill (the last budget passed by the General Assembly since FY 2020-2021 was by continuing resolution) the Conservation Bank’s funding from state revenue was $11,620,319.  For FY 2021-2022 that number, less federal funds, is $20,634,534, which represents a significant increase of recent budgets.

Milkweed for Monarchs Project Update

By Hannah Nybo, SCWF community outreach intern

With support from people all over South Carolina and deep appreciation for generous donors and volunteers, this year’s native milkweed seed distribution program was a huge success!

Over the past twenty years, there has been a sharp decline in the monarch butterfly population along their normal migration routes from Canada to Mexico. In fact, these important pollinators have dwindled by almost 97 percent! Native milkweed plants, however, are the key to helping these beautiful butterflies continue to thrive in North America.

This year, the SC Wildlife Federation was able to assist in increasing crucial habitat for our fluttering friends by distributing nearly 5,000 milkweed packets throughout the state! Native milkweed seed varieties were purchased in bulk from Ernst Conservation Seeds, then packaged and shipped by interns and generous volunteers. These seed packets were paired with informational cards that we created for recipients to learn how to successfully raise the plants, and how essential the plant is to the monarch species.

South Carolina residents were excited by the opportunity to support the butterflies, and it showed through their participation. The project was advertised just once on social media, and we received 4,000 requests in two months! One recipient, Sherry Lawrence of Sumter, shared that she was “looking forward to new little babies that will turn into beautiful butterflies!” This energized support from those who requested the seeds is part of what made this project so successful! We also asked recipients to consider donating to offset program costs, and many of you did. Thank you!

Because of this project, thousands of migrating monarchs will now have places to lay their eggs and food for their caterpillars before they become butterflies and begin their journey to Central Mexico. Hopefully, we will see an increase in monarchs in the coming years!

Through this program, the SCWF was also able to educate, advocate, and build our network with 4,000 new supporters, and to connect them with the wildlife in their own backyards. Recipients like Pam Sarratt of Anderson are excited to learn about and support the butterflies, and “can’t wait to see monarch butterflies on the flowers” in their own yards. Dozens of requests have already come in for next spring’s distribution, and we are so excited to continue supporting the monarch butterfly!

If you or your company are interested in sponsoring this program in 2022, please contact Angi Fuller Wildt at mail@scwf.org or 803-256-0670, or use the Donate button on our home page.

We would like to send a HUGE THANK YOU to our interns Brantley Bissette & Hannah Nybo for all their work on this program! THANK YOU ALSO to volunteers Barbara & Jimmy Watson for MANY hours dedicated to processing the seed packet requests, as well as volunteers Kathy Resener, Jean Prothro, and Becky Mace. We couldn’t have done this without you all helping us out!

Banner photo: Monarch Butterfly by Teri Carter

KECK: Birds of a Feather

By Jay Keck, Habitat Education Manager for Chapin Magazine

Bird. Say it out loud. It’s not the most exciting word in our dictionary, but it represents one of the most extraordinary classes of animals inhabiting our amazing planet. Birds are capable of filling our lives with an overwhelming amount of joy, wonder, and beauty. They quite literally shine as brightly as flames when reflecting the sun’s rays, and (figuratively) shine while singing their sweet melodies during our springs and early summers.

Did you know that birds are a direct descendant of a group of dinosaurs that includes the Tyrannosaurus Rex? The next time you see a Great Blue Heron methodically hunting reptiles, birds, fish, or mammals on Lake Murray, a pond, or one of our beautiful rivers, allow your mind to wander and consider its link to the dinosaurs and earth’s rich past.  If that’s not exciting enough, you may one day find yourself witnessing the fastest animal on the planet, a Peregrine Falcon, right here in Chapin, racing at speeds in excess of 240mph towards a raft of coots on the lake. The excitement and beauty also comes in tiny avian packages. The Ruby Throated Hummingbird, whose wings beat at an incredible 53 times per second, and weighs only 5 grams (two pennies), will be energetically and noisily feeding at our sugar water containers in just a month, giving us the opportunity to watch this spectacular bird that travels to the U.S. from its distant wintering grounds in Central America.


Ruby-throated hummingbird, by Cameron Foster

Unfortunately, not everyone is aware of the dazzling and dizzying variety of birds we have in our state, or even in our small community. EBird, a website used by “birders” from around the world to record their sightings, reveals over 400 bird species recorded in SC, and 258 species in Lexington county alone.

Read more here: https://www.chapinmagazine.com/home/2021/3/15/birds-of-a-feather