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Last modified
1/26/2010 2:16:45 PM
Creation date
10/12/2006 12:48:38 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Water Supply Protection
File Number
8460.500
Description
Platte River Recovery Plan
Basin
South Platte
Date
2/11/1994
Author
USFWS
Title
Whooping Crane Recovery Plan
Water Supply Pro - Doc Type
Publication
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<br />'''~'... <br /> <br />16 <br /> <br />Settlement of the mid-continental and coastal prairies and mere human presence. as <br />opposed to alteration of the habitat, may have interfered with the continued use of prairie <br />and wetlands by breeding whooping cranes. <br /> <br />Man's conversion of pothole and prairie to hay and grain production made much of the <br />original habitat unsuitable for whooping cranes. Disruptive practices included draining, <br />fencing, sowing, and all of the human activity associated with these operations, The advent <br />of rural electrification brought power lines, and collisions are known to have accounted for <br />the death or serious injury of at least 19 Whooping cranes since 1956. <br /> <br />Whooping cranes adhere to ancestral breeding areas, migration routes, and wintering <br />grounds. There is little likelihood of pioneering new habitat, except locally. The only <br />self-sustaining wild population remains vulnerable to destruction through a hurricane or <br />contaminant spill, due primarily to its limited wintering distribution along the GIWW of the <br />Texas coast. The GIWW experiences some of the heaviest barge traffic of any waterway in <br />the world. Much of the tonnage is in petrochemical products, An accident resulting in a <br />spill could potentially destroy whooping cranes and/or their food resources. Transport of <br />petroleum products and other chemicals by barge along the GIWW has for many years been <br />considered a potential danger to whooping cranes and other wildlife at Aransas NWR. <br />During summer, 1974,25 to 50 barrels of crude petroleum leaked from a barge. The high <br />viscosity of the oil, and the prompt action by clean-up crews, limited the spill to an area <br />averaging about 1.6 m wide and extending 16 km along the canal. This spill, and other <br />more recent ones, emphasize the hazards which accompany the shipping of dangerous <br />cargoes on the GIWW. <br /> <br />A consultant to the Army Corps of Engineers (Gulf Engineers and Consultants, Inc, 1992) <br />assessed threats to the whooping crane and its habitat from spills of vessel fuels and <br />cargoes. Each concluded that the hazard of spill exists, but the probability of their <br />occurrence is low. Catastrophic events, such as a large spill are infrequent, and therefore, <br />difficult to predict, There is a great potential for acceleration of traffic, and an increase in <br />accidents as traffic increases from Mexico associated with ratification of the North <br />American Free Trade Agreement. Thus, the probabi,lity of occurrence of the most likely spill <br />(1 per 1,075 years) and worst case spill (1 per 7,98'2 years) are very likely conservative <br />(Gulf Engineers and Consultants, Inc. 1992). The worst case spill estimated by the <br />Environmental Protection Agency (1992) would be approximately 33,000 barrels of liquids. <br /> <br />The U.S. Coast Guard has the lead responsibility for spill response and containment. The <br />U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has response plans for the Gulf of Mexico (U.S, Fish and <br />Wildlife Service 1979) and Aransas National Wildlife Refuge specifically (Robertson et al. <br />1993), <br /> <br />The latter Plan (Robertson et al. 1993) ", . .is inadequate in providing full protection for the <br />whooping cranes. Such a plan is not possible since chemicals are transported right through <br />the center of the whooping crane winter range. Spills of hazardous materials may threaten <br />human health so that approach could only be done by personnel wearing special protective <br />suits and breathing apparatus, Spill of gaseous materials could directly kill all whoopers <br />downwind of the disaster. Response time at best is '-2 hours by the refuge staff, and 3-4 <br />hours by spill control specialists. An event occurring at night or during bad weather (the <br />
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