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104,000 acres of forest in the Adirondacks – an area seven times the size of Manhattan – have been protected thanks to an innovative deal between The Lyme Timber Company and The Nature Conservancy.
This land, purchased from Domtar Industries Inc., was one of the largest unprotected properties in the six-million-acre Adirondack Park. It is also one of the last remaining opportunities in the Northeastern United States to save such a large parcel of intact forestland.
According to renowned author Bill McKibben, the Adirondack Park is the “most important experiment in nature conservation anywhere on the planet.” Yet, the northernmost section of the Park, near the Canadian border, remains extremely vulnerable to unsustainable forestry practices and other types of incompatible development.
This land deal will help to alleviate those threats. It includes agreements with New York State that will conserve ecologically-significant natural resources, sustain forestry jobs, preserve traditional land uses such as hunting and fishing and create new public recreation opportunities.
The project conserves critical habitat for wide-ranging mammals such as moose, black bear and fisher. Also preserved are 220 miles of permanent and seasonal streams, some of which harbor native brook trout and other aquatic species, and 20 lakes and ponds with 16 miles of undeveloped shoreline. This newly-protected area also contains important habitat for the Bicknell’s thrush, a species listed as of special concern by New York State.
The 104,500 acre deal includes such natural gems as:
The Adirondack Park is the “most important experiment in nature conservation anywhere on the planet.”
Bill McKibben
Author, The End of Nature
In addition, the project adds a vital piece to the Conservancy’s Northern Forest Protection Initiative, an ambitious plan to preserve the extensive and diverse forests that spread across northern New England and on into Quebec, New Brunswick and the Adirondack Mountains. The area is a priority site for the Conservancy due to its rich concentration of flora, fauna and natural communities, its value as a major wildlife corridor and its symbolic and geographic significance in defining the character of the northeastern United States.
This acquisition ensure that these lands will remain open to the public. The project will also create new public access to more than 47,000 acres of lands and waters. “The Adirondacks have long been a haven of serenity and beauty for New Yorkers and visitors from around the world,” said Henry Tepper, director of The Nature Conservancy’s New York chapter. “The Nature Conservancy is delighted to be a part of a project that will ensure that people will continue to have a place to retreat and recall their connection with nature."