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Learn more about Attwater’s prairie chickens and the coastal tallgrass prairie. |
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About 50 Attwater’s prairie chickens, considered among the most endangered birds in
The ranch, in
The birds are being released on the ranch through a partnership with The Nature Conservancy, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Coastal Prairie Coalition of the Grazing Lands Conservation Initiative,
The ranch is part of the 60,000-acre Goliad Prairie, which spans half a dozen family ranches. The Goliad Prairie and the adjacent 40,000-acre Refugio Prairie make up the largest remaining intact expanse of tallgrass coastal prairie on the
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For more than a decade, the survival of Attwater’s prairie chickens has depended on intense species management, restoration of their limited existing habitat and a captive-breeding program – all conducted by a recovery team of conservation organizations spearheaded by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
Wade Harrell, Ph.D., is the Conservancy’s Texas Coastal Prairies project director and a member of the recovery team for the species. He is providing project management for the reintroduction of the birds at this site. “Attwater’s prairie chickens were once a common wildlife species inhabiting
The birds that do persist in the wild are found in two locations not far from
The rapid disappearance of the coastal prairie is the primary reason for the decline of the Attwater’s prairie chicken, placed on the Endangered Species List in 1967. The tallgrass coastal prairie they depend on once covered 6 million acres; today, only about 2 percent of it still remains in fragmented tracts.
“Our goal in working in the Refugio-Goliad Prairie is to conserve this coastal prairie, one of the rarest habitat types in
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The limited habitat that remains for the prairie chickens at both the Attwater Prairie Chicken National Wildlife Refuge and Texas City Prairie Preserve is becoming increasingly threatened by encroaching development. Experts believe the reintroduction of the birds in the Goliad and Refugio prairies is the best hope for this imperiled species, although the risks are high and there is no certainty of success.
But the effort is worthwhile, Harrell notes. “The Attwater’s prairie chicken is an important part of our natural
Maintenance and restoration of the Refugio and Goliad prairies has been a concerted effort between landowners and a number of conservation agencies and organizations since about 1995. Participating organizations include the Grazing Lands Conservation Initiative, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, The Nature Conservancy,
The release of Attwater’s prairie chickens on a private ranch is funded in part through a grant from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service’s Private Stewardship Grants Program to the Coastal Prairie Coalition of the Grazing Lands Conservation Initiative, a group of private landowners committed to prairie conservation and working with the Natural Resources Conservation Service.
The Grazing Lands Conservation Initiative has a
The Fish and Wildlife Service is supplying the juvenile birds for release from the captive breeding program and provides expertise and support for the project as the federal agency charged with the protection and recovery of endangered species. The Conservancy provides project management and has hired staff to monitor the released birds during critical periods.