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Mapping out success:
A landscape linked by a network of wildlife habitat cores, corridors,
buffers and linkages. This is the long-range focus of 2C1Forest. Protection
of key linkages across this landscape is the immediate focus. Our
strategy for realizing success is rooted in the basic principles that
guide successful conservation efforts: the proven principles of conservation
biology and sound land stewardship.
A strategic focus:
These well-established principles of conservation biology and sound
land stewardship center on the belief that establishment, and maintenance,
of well-designed networks of core reserves or protected areas, and
matrix lands, is critical to an ecoregion's long-term health,
integrity and viability. Core reserves or protected areas can serve
to protect plants and animals from process that threaten their existence,
and can provide a way to study the impacts of management practices;
matrix lands can be managed to allow for maintenance of connections
or linkages between core reserves.
A targeted campaign:
Linkages allow for movement of individual plans and animals across
a landscape, to maintain healthy populations and genetic diversity.
While many of our partners are working to establish new or expanded
protected core areas and connectivity between them within the ecoregion,
2C1Forest is designing a targeted campaign aimed at conservation
and restoration of the 5 most critically at-risk linkages which,
if not maintained, will see the ecoregion segmented into isolated
ecological islands.
The 5 priority linkages are:
- Black River Valley (connecting Tug Hill and the Adirondacks
in New York State)
- Lake Champlain Valley (connecting the Adirondacks and Vermont)
- Green-Sutton Mountains (connecting Vermont and Quebec)
- Gaspe Peninsula-Northern Maine
- Chignecto Isthmus (connecting New Brunswick and Nova Scotia)
Want to know more about our campaign and work?
Simply contact us here, or
follow the links on the left of your screen for more information.
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