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Plants and Animals View All
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Long Pond Greenbelt is a chain of unspoiled coastal plain ponds bordered by wetlands and fringing oak forests. Formed from glacial processes, the ponds in the Greenbelt vary in depth from year to year, depending on rainfall. This variability of pond depth has created a unique habitat called a coastal plain pond shore community.
Why We Selected this Site:
This ecosystem supports one of the highest concentrations of rare species and natural communities anywhere in New York State. Its preservation has been a priority for the Town of Southampton since 1968, when the Sag Harbor conservationists first wrote to the town regarding its protection.
What We'vd Done:
In 1969, Southampton declared in its Master Plan that preservation of the Long Pond Greenbelt was a significant goal. Land acquisitions proceeded slowly until 1985, when The Nature Conservancy increased its involvement in the conservation project. What followed was a chain of land acquisitions in the Greenbelt by The Nature Conservancy, Southampton Town, and Suffolk County. To date, over 600 acres of the Greenbelt are permanently protected.
This ecosystem supports one of the highest concentrations of rare species and natural communities anywhere in New York State!
The state-endangered tiger salamander is found here and over 100 species of birds have been identified during an intensive four-year study conducted by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation.
As many as 38 rare plants can be found here, mainly within the pond margins, including sundews, rosy coreopsis, short beaked bald rush, silvery aster and creeping St. John's wort.
This 600-acre preserve is located in Bridgehampton, Town of Southampton, New York.
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