SCWF is proud to support S. 96, the South Carolina Boating Safety and Education bill which will make South Carolina’s waterways safer. This legislation will require boaters born on or after July 1, 2007 to receive a boating safety certificate by completing a boating safety course administered or approved by the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources (SCDNR) before operating a boat with a 10-horsepower engine or greater. Our Director of Education, BeBe Dalton Harrison, attended the ceremonial bill signing yesterday on Lake Murray with Governor Henry McMaster, Lieutenant Governor Pamela S. Evette, state and local law enforcement officers, state agency leaders, members of the General Assembly, and many bill supporters who had lost loved ones in boating accidents.
By BeBe Dalton Harrison, SCWF Director of Education
High school students from across the state gathered recently at King’s Mountain State Park to take part in Camp Wildwood, a conservation camp founded in 1954. Campers attending the camp are selected after being nominated by a teacher or other advisor and take part in daily classes including Wildlife, Fisheries, Forestry, Hunter Education, Boating, and more. In addition to the classes, campers participate in hikes, crazy sports, team building, leadership development, and dances. This camp is an excellent opportunity for high school students to learn more about careers in natural resources and the outdoors. In addition, the campers form incredible family-like bonds through their “niches” (groups with whom they attend class). One interesting part of this camp is that all of the counselors were once campers themselves, so they know first-hand what a strong impact the camp can be for students. Many of the counselors and staff have even gone into natural resources careers because of the impact of the camp (including the author of this article!)
The South Carolina Wildlife Federation (SCWF) is a proud sponsor of Camp Wildwood. In addition to SCWF, other sponsors include the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources, the Garden Club of South Carolina, the Harry Hampton Memorial Wildlife Fund, and South Carolina Parks and Recreation. Camp Wildwood is held annually in June at Kings Mountain State Park and you can find out more information about it by visiting https://www.campwildwoodsc.com/.
This year marks the 50th anniversary of the Endangered Species Act! Join us as we highlight species throughout the year that have benefited from this landmark legislation.
This week is shark week! Take a dive with us into the fascinating world of sharks and their importance in ocean ecosystems. The oceanic whitetip shark is a federally threatened species that lives off South Carolina’s coast and is a pelagic species, meaning they are found exclusively in waters of the open ocean. Sharks are a keystone species, and as top predators, they keep ocean ecosystems in balance by maintaining healthy prey populations and keeping vital habitats healthy. The oceanic whitetip in particular faces threats that caused its listing under the Endangered Species Act, including incidental bycatch in commercial fisheries and harvest for international trade due to their highly valuable fins. Help spread awareness on the importance of sharks and all fish by learning more about best fishing practices and joining our Plishing Challenge!
WOW!!! We’re so incredibly grateful and humbled by the support of so many in our biggest fundraiser of the year – all raising money to conserve and restore South Carolina’s wildlife and habitat!
We’re truly thankful for all of the amazing items donated to our auction by generous businesses small and large, and many from individual donors too. We love seeing the excitement of so many people who care passionately about wildlife – people from 12 different states (even as far away as California!) registered for our auction, bought raffle tickets and merchandise, placed bids, and donated.
Thank YOU to the item donors, bidders, and sponsors of the 2023 Wild Summer Nights Online Auction for making this our most successful auction yet! Your participation helped us exceed our goal, and we are truly grateful for your support. All proceeds fund SCWF’s conservation and education programs that make an impact for wildlife right here in our state.
Nature lovers gathered at the Hopelands Gardens guest cottage on Friday morning for a lecture on identifying birds by their sounds. The event, part of an educational series organized by the Friends of Hopelands and Rye Patch, featured speaker Jay Keck, industry habitat manager for the South Carolina Wildlife Federation.
“There’s a language of birds, and they’ll tell you a lot,” said Keck about the benefits of learning to recognize bird calls. “When you hear certain birds, it can tell you things about the landscape.” Keck’s lecture emphasized birds that are in decline and what people can do to help them thrive.
“There’s a language of birds, and they’ll tell you a lot,” said Keck about the benefits of learning to recognize bird calls. “When you hear certain birds, it can tell you things about the landscape.” Keck’s lecture emphasized birds that are in decline and what people can do to help them thrive.
According to Keck, getting people interested in nature and encouraging them to help preserve it is the ultimate aim of SCWF. “One of our biggest goals is just to kind of connect people to our planet because if they’re connected, they’ll care about it. Which makes them automatically conservationists,” he said.
So how can we help the birds? According to Keck, it’s important to plant and preserve native plants, which have natural chemicals that attract necessary insects. This then attracts birds, reptiles and amphibians, creating healthy environments for them. “More and more nurseries are actually selling [native plants] because folks are starting to get it. Even big box stores like Lowe’s and Home Depot are starting to sprinkle in some native plants,” he said.
The Friends of Hopelands and Rye Patch will host two more presentations on July 14 and 28. Both will feature Keck and will conclude the group’s educational events for the summer season.
The July 14 event will discuss ways to attract caterpillars, butterflies, moths and birds to your yard.
The July 28 presentation will provide tips on how to garden with native plants and for create habitats that benefit wildlife.
SCWF Note: This is a terrific article about an amazing SC species, the threats that it faces, and legislation that could help to save it. SCWF is involved in a lawsuit to protect the ephemeral ponds on the Cainhoy peninsula mentioned in this article as “being actively destroyed…this year” – these wetlands are critical for the survival of this species, and many others. SCWF is also actively pushing for the passage of the Recovering America’s Wildlife Act mentioned in this article, and we applaud Senator Graham for being a co-sponsor!
Published at: https://www.postandcourier.com/environment/with-growing-subdivisions-and-drought-is-it-too-late-to-recover-the-goldilocks-frog/article_aff42fc8-0627-11ee-8f13-57539b227266.html
Ben Morrison, with the Amphibian and Reptile Conservancy, and James Henne, project leader at the Bears Bluff National Fish Hatchery, release gopher frogs into the Francis Marion Forest on June 1, 2023. Grace Beahm Alford/Staff
Grace Beahm Alford gbeahm@postandcourier.com
BERKELEY COUNTY – Beyond a locked gate and an old logging road lies Sunset Pond – an ephemeral oasis known to South Carolina scientists as the last stronghold of the Carolina gopher frog.
The name “Sunset Pond” doesn’t appear on maps. In this southern stretch of the 259,000-acre Francis Marion National Forest, surprisingly close to Charleston’s growing sprawl, subdivisions and drought are already threatening the frog’s survival. No need to add passersby to the mix.
The pond’s secret location has helped it grow into a giant conservation experiment. Listening devices, orange flags, underground tubes and the scars of targeted fire management dot the landscape.
To stabilize the gopher frogs’ numbers, a husband-and-wife team of conservation specialists – working closely with state and federal scientists – have been mapping and preparing the area for the release of almost 700 captive-reared froglets back into the national forest.
The goal here is to find out if early intervention can stop the gopher frog’s population decline before the species winds up on the list of federally endangered species. Nationwide, less than 10,000 Carolina gopher frogs remain and, according to Andrew Grosse, the S.C. Department of Natural Resource’s state herpetologist, “populations in South Carolina have declined dramatically.”
On June 1, the couple – Ben Morrison and Sydney Sheedy – arrived at Sunset Pond with a federal employee who carried a cooler full of 30 food cups with lids tightly attached. Each container contained a speckled froglet, maybe the size of a wet bar of soap. Some were sage green, others were dark olive. Most had just lost their tadpole tails, and a few had vestige tails attached.
“Where do you want to start?” Morrison said, with a heavy sigh. He’d already released 500 froglets at this location over the past month and each needed to be carefully placed, by hand, next to pre-identified burrows in the ground that gopher frogs need for safety and survival.
This work is both time-consuming and a long time coming.
Seven months ago, Morrison and Sheedy had collected these same critters from the waters of Sunset Pond when they were just eggs. Once brought to the federally run Bears Bluff National Fish Hatchery on Wadmalaw Island, tadpoles later emerged and then slowly metamorphosed under the care of James Henne, the hatchery’s project leader.
The Endangered Species Act, which turned 50 this year, has been effective at preventing extinctions but quite ineffective at actually recovering species to healthy populations. Listed species get trapped at numbers that are perilously small and genetically defunct.
Carolina gopher frogs are an ideal species to keep out of this trap by getting ahead of the ball, intervening with this so-called “head start” program now while there are still a few robust breeding ponds remaining.
It’s an approach known as proactive conservation. Some think it’s the future of U.S. conservation. Others doubt whether it can overcome a warming, increasingly crowded America.
Not endangered, yet
Carolina gopher frogs are listed as endangered under S.C. state law but under federal law they are a “species at-risk.” That designation means that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is still reviewing its case for federal endangered species status.
Currently, there are over 1,300 species listed as threatened or endangered under U.S. law. But less than 60 of them have been removed for making a full recovery.
In other words, species typically land on the endangered species list when it’s too late for them to recover. Their numbers are so low when finally given protections that conservation measures become expensive and extreme. The petition process can drag on, taking three years or often longer. Between 2000 and 2009, the average wait time was 10 years.
The too-little, too-late pattern in the Endangered Species Act system was first uncovered by scientists in 1993. According to a study published by some of the same scientists last year, nothing’s really changed.
Here’s another problem: Some endangered listing or delisting decisions are swayed by political interests – instead of science, as the law requires. The Post and Courier has previously covered such instances in the cases of the dwarf-flowered heartleaf and the northern long-eared bat.
A promising new bipartisan U.S. bill called the Recovering America’s Wildlife Act, or RAWA, was built to address some of the endangered species law’s shortcomings, including a heavy focus on proactive conservation.
It would invest $1.4 billion annually into proactive conservation for wildlife in decline, species that are officially listed but also many that are not, like the Carolina gopher frog. The Bears Bluff hatchery and the three other Fish and Wildlife hatcheries currently experimenting with gopher frog head-start programs, in the Carolinas and Georgia, would stand to benefit from RAWA.
A large chunk of the money from RAWA would go directly to state agencies, like the S.C. Department of Natural Resources, which often partners with conservation nonprofits. These partnerships have proven key.
Morrison and Sheedy work for the nonprofit Amphibian and Reptile Conservancy, which partners with both DNR and the federal agencies. DNR also partners with the Riverbanks Zoo and Garden to run a similar, albeit smaller, head-start program for gopher frogs in the state capital of Columbia.
The RAWA bill failed to pass the U.S. Senate last year. In 2023, wildlife advocates get another shot at pushing it through. South Carolina Republican Sen. Lindsey Graham has already signed onto the 2023 version of the bill. Sen. Tim Scott, R-S.C., has not.
Even if RAWA passes at the federal level, local development could still work against the frog and its shot at recovery. In the city government offices of Charleston, which permits development for land where frog-breeding ponds still exist, the species isn’t on the radar.
‘Goldilocks’ frogs and subdivisions
“They’re kind of a Goldilocks frog,” said Morrison while releasing a froglet next to a half-filled Sunset Pond ringed with blue flag irises. “They only really like a specific type of habitat.” In simple terms, like the girl in the fairy tale they want the bed that’s just right.
Ephemeral ponds in longleaf pine habitats are about as specific as you get. The frogs depend on these ponds for breeding, which brim with rainwater only seasonally before the waters disappear, almost magically, in the summer heat.
But entire pond habitats are at risk of disappearing under a pile of bulldozed fill. Ephemeral ponds are being actively destroyed on the Cainhoy Peninsula this year.
Henne, the hatchery leader, said he reared frogs this year that were part of a “rescue effort” from a pond, located just outside the borders of the Francis Marion National Forest, that will be the future site of Point Hope townhomes.
The new 45,000-occupant development will be the size of a small city. The mixed-use development once called Cainhoy Plantation, now Point Hope, sits on 9,000 acres of currently undeveloped timber and forest land in the city of Charleston in Berkeley County. The developers received federal permits last spring from the Army Corps of Engineers to destroy nearly 200 acres of wetlands, which are protected under the Clean Water Act.
Under current interpretations of the Clean Water Act, their isolation from other waterways under the law puts them in danger of becoming subdivisions.
U.S. Supreme Court cases in recent years have called into question the Clean Water Act’s jurisdiction over so-called “isolated waters,” such as ephemeral ponds.
Under a recent Supreme Court case, those waters are still in a legal gray area over whether they are protected. Federal agencies have been slow to give guidance on how to treat these ponds, leaving developers free to move ahead in the meantime.
“This is just another example of all the harm of this proposed Cainhoy development. It could destroy imperiled species in the South Carolina Lowcounty,” said Chris DeScherer, an attorney for the Southern Environmental Law Center.
And because the frog is not listed as endangered, its habitat – mainly the ponds and connected forest patches around them – don’t receive protections under the Endangered Species Act. The city of Charleston says it’s not accountable for either.
“Environmental and wildlife issues are outside the purview of the city’s site-review process. Those matters are handled by subject-area experts at the appropriate federal and state agencies prior to the issuance of relevant city permits,” said a spokesman for the city of Charleston, which in 2014, approved the rezoning of the Cainhoy Peninsula, enabling up to 18,000 homes to be built there.
Because ephemeral ponds are not fed by creeks or streams, they usually dry up in the heat of summer and don’t support the fish that might otherwise eat the frog eggs and tadpoles. Without fish, ephemeral ponds are perfect gopher frog nurseries.
Ponds that remain full year-round, like the ones created for townhome developments and golf courses, actually displace gopher frogs – they don’t support them.
Henne reared the eggs rescued from Cainhoy Peninsula bulldozers on Wadmalaw Island. Once they metamorphosed, Grosse and other biologists from DNR released them in an undisclosed ephemeral pond on protected land.
“Due to the sensitive nature of this state endangered species, we have made an effort not to disclose sensitive location information of our release site,” Grosse said.
But, wherever it is, the frogs’ new pond home is not safe from the extreme droughts in South Carolina’s future.
Drought and doom
“Because of development, there are fewer ponds,” said Brian Crawford, a herpetologist who assessed the future viability of gopher frog populations for his postdoctoral work. “But the other big problem is climate change.”
Of the 10,000 Carolina gopher frogs that remain, all of them are within the rapidly warming and drought-stricken Southeast region. But, as Crawford and his colleagues concluded in a 2022 publication, the future intensity and frequency of droughts is still uncertain.
If the next 30 years looked like the last 30 years, with about four years of drought per decade, then there is good news for gopher frogs: They have an 89 percent chance of avoiding extinction.
If things get drier, as government agencies predict, things look more bleak. Under a future of more frequent droughts, the likelihood that the species survives drops to 70 percent across their Southeastern range. That also increases the likelihood of local extinction in certain states. In other words, the gopher frog could disappear completely from states like North and South Carolina.
Notably, Crawford’s model projections only considered future drought and didn’t factor in whether future development might further push these numbers towards extinction.
Crawford, now a scientist at the consultancy firm Compass Resource Management, said that drought is already affecting the quality of ponds as breeding ground. Instead of yearly breeding, he’s seen more sparse breeding over time, perhaps as some ponds fail to fill up in the winter or dry up too quickly in the spring.
Sheedy, the conservation specialist, said she’s seen this phenomena, too, confirming “There is one pond that we found recently that historically supported gopher frogs, but that pond is just barely hanging in there. It has egg masses but they aren’t doing great.”
For now, Francis Marion National Forest still has at least three populations, or clusters, of gopher frogs that still breed almost yearly across seven ephemeral ponds. Not being able to control the climate nor encroaching development, scientists are focusing their efforts here.
If successful, this year’s release of 700 frogs would be almost triple the number of frogs as 2019, when the “head-start” program started, as an experiment, by scientists who didn’t want to wait.
Published at: https://www.postandcourier.com/environment/with-growing-subdivisions-and-drought-is-it-too-late-to-recover-the-goldilocks-frog/article_aff42fc8-0627-11ee-8f13-57539b227266.html
Three split-rail fence gardens, full of native wildflower pollinators, have been installed at the Richland Library Ballentine.
Thanks to grant funding from the Richland County Conservation Commission (RCCC), SCWF staff worked with Richland Library Ballentine staff and community volunteers to create native wildflower pollinator gardens in the “grass island” of their parking lot. The gardens are already attracting pollinators as well as frogs, toads, and lizards, that have been seen foraging around the flowers and finding shelter in the vegetation and mulch.
Ballentine library is a popular year-round destination and is visited by hundreds of thousands of residents each year. Library staff, including Branch Manager Kelly Jones, have been highly supportive of conservation projects on their property. Last year, thanks to another RCCC grant, SCWF staff installed a CollidEscape window film that prevents bird strikes and is transparent from indoors. This year’s pollinator garden project will provide much needed food, in the form of insects, for many of the same birds that are being protected on the library’s property!
Planting was on Earth Day as part of the library’s celebration
This project went smoothly thanks to the volunteers who helped install three split-rail fence gardens at the front of the library within the island separating the two parking areas. Each garden contains native plants that will flower during the spring, summer, and early fall months, which will help pollinators throughout the year. Interpretive nature signs were installed next to each garden to educate the thousands of visitors exploring the property. The gardens will play an active role in supporting wildlife and educating local citizens on how to garden for wildlife, fulfilling two missions of the SC Wildlife Federation: conservation and education! If you haven’t seen the gardens yet, please visit Ballentine Library to see what you can find amongst the flowers!