Environment
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Vol. XXI, No. 1
Friday-Saturday, July 27-28, 2007 | MANILA, PHILIPPINES
Environment
BY ED STODDARD, Reuters
US border fence seen harming ocelots, butterflies
Rio Grande, Texas — The riot of green vegetation that lines both sides of
the Rio Grande river along the southeast Texas and Mexican border can give a
canoeist the impression of gliding past unbroken wilderness.
But the strip of riparian forest that runs a few miles between the Texas
towns of Fronton and Roma is deceptive.
In reality, one of the most ecologically diverse corners of the United
States has been diced up by farming and urban sprawl into isolated fragments of
habitat that support far less wildlife than when they were whole.
Now, conservationists are concerned that a planned border security fence
to stem illegal immigration from Mexico could cut this delicate area up even
more and possibly remove the corridor of vital riverbank habitat that remains.
"We know as habitats become fragments — whether by roads, fences or walls
— animals become much less capable of roaming widely," said Dr. Joel Berger, a
senior scientist with the New York-based Wildlife Conservation Society.
"As these restrictions occur, animals become isolated and with isolation
the risks of local extinctions greatly increase," he said.
Animals at risk of local extinction include the US population of the
ocelot — a wild cat that is down to a few dozen animals — and several species
of birds. Rare native plants such as sabal palm trees are down to a few isolated
patches.
Driving along Route 281 which hugs this section of the Rio Grande reveals
what lies behind the forested facade on the river’s edge — fast-growing border
towns and cultivated fields of corn, sugar cane and other crops.
At stake is the sheer diversity of life in a region of lush subtropical
vegetation threaded by a great river, lying between vast arid landscapes to the
west and the Gulf of Mexico to the east.
Few Americans are aware of the area’s ecological significance, which in
four counties includes 300 butterfly species — more than the rest of the
country east of the Mississippi — and over 500 different birds.
Ecologists are trying to reconnect the dots by revegetating old farmland
with native plants which they hope to link up. At the Nature Conservancy of
Texas’ 1,000-acre Southmost Preserve, the contrast is plain along a dirt road
with a cornfield on one side and wild bush on the other.
"This side looked exactly like that cornfield seven years ago," said Lisa
Williams, a local project director with the Nature Conservancy, as she pointed
to the tangle of wild growth which included haunting tepegauje trees, a key
species of the area, their feathery leaves blowing in the wind.
"These are the pearls in a necklace which we are trying to string
together," she said.
When ecologists look at a patchwork of ecosystems cut up by roads or farms
they think of islands. And like islands out to sea, their isolation can be the
undoing of their inhabitants.
According to the World Conservation Union, about 800 species have become
extinct since 1500, when records began. Most were on islands.
But scientists say that extinctions and steep local population declines
are now creeping onshore because continental habitats are being diced up by
human activities.
Isolation makes populations more prone to sudden die-offs from disease or
drought and also limits their genetic pool.
Other tracts of land besides Southmost are being protected in the area and
reverted to their original state but there are worries the wall could cut
through some of this work.
"There are two dozen species of birds that only live in the river forest
and if that was cleared for the wall, they will be lost to the area," said
Martin Hagne, the executive director of the Valley Nature Center.
Supporters of the wall say it is needed to stem the tide of illegal
immigration into the United States and the government says one green spin-off
will be a reduction in the mountains of litter which illicit crossers leave
behind.
"I think it’s well documented the effect that illegal border crossing
activity has on the environment. The result in many cases is refuse left behind
such as plastic bottles, clothes and discarded rubber rafts," said Michael
Friel, a spokesperson for US Customs and Border Protection.
He also said that in areas where effective control of the border has been
reasserted such as near San Diego, local wild habitat which was trampled by
illegal crossers has regrown.
Elsewhere international fences are being dropped for conservation reasons.
The fence between South Africa’s famed Kruger National Park and Mozambique is
being removed to make more room for elephants and other wildlife.
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