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The Biological Cost of a Cabin in the
Woods
By Jim Robbins
posted 4/30/02
Dreaming of a log cabin on 20 pristine acres in the
mountains? Think again. Getting away from it all may pose the most serious
threat to wildlife in the growth-plagued West, according to biologists who
have been studying the ecological effects of rural residential
development. New homes cause problems not only outside parks and
wilderness areas, but inside as well.
The biological effects of
sprawl have been suspected, but studies have been few. Now the science is
beginning to gel. Andrew Hansen, for example, an associate professor of
ecology at Montana State University, in Bozeman, has catalogued some of
the effects of development on private land outside Yellowstone National
Park, where the number of rural homes increased by 400 percent between
1970 and 1997.
Among the primary agents of change in rural
development, says Hansen, are dog food and compost. Bears are drawn in by
these goodies and may become comfortable enough to lose their fear of
people. That leads to more human-bear encounters, which can result in the
bear’s being put to death. Magpies and brown-headed cowbirds are also
drawn to pet food and compost, and they flourish around rural houses.
These "brood parasites" feed on the young of other birds, such as yellow
warbler. In one of Hansen’s study areas, nearly half of the yellow warbler
nests were raided by magpies or cowbirds, and abandoned by the warblers.
Hansen found that American robins, which can better defend themselves, did
not lose any nests to the brood parasites.
The problem is made
worse by the fact that not all habitat is created equal. The same things
that appeal to humans--deciduous trees, riparian areas, warmer
temperatures, and lower elevation--make for ecological "hot spots" that
are critical to wildlife. The human population along ecologically
important forest fringes in Colorado, for example, grew 25 percent faster
than in the rest of the state between 1990 and 2000.
Human
dwellings affect wildlife indirectly as well as directly. Some western
ecosystems, for instance, have evolved with frequent fires that burn out
the thick undergrowth every 20 or 30 years, opening the forest to a
broader range of species and higher numbers. "The presence of homes
constrains fire regimes in these ecosystems," says David Theobald of the
Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory at Colorado State University. No
longer can a fire be allowed simply to burn itself out. "That has huge
impacts and alters the function of these habitats."
Most federal
land in the West is protected from development, but many biological hot
spots are on private ground, and many species spend a disproportionate
part of their time there. Around Glacier National Park, for example, 60
percent of the conflicts between bears and people occur on private
land--which is just 17 percent of the land base. So the search is on for
ways to make private land more compatible with the wilderness around it,
everything from locking up the pet food to "cluster developments" that
preserve some open space to conservation easements on critical
habitat.
The recent research underscores the crucial role that
private land plays in biodiversity and casts doubt on the assumption that
species in Yellowstone and elsewhere are safe from the depredations of
growth. And it raises a big question for managers of natural reserves. How
do you protect habitat that is critical to species within a park, such as
the yellow warbler or the grizzly bear, but that lies on private land
outside the park? Research points to the need to mitigate the effects of
development on private property--soon.
That’s where the science is
headed, says Hansen. "It’s the same situation logging was in 20 years ago.
All people had were strong personal beliefs. Then the science came on
board, and it led to ways to log that minimize negative impacts."
© 2002 NASI
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