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April 14, 2011

FIRST-OF-ITS-KIND STATUS OF FISH HABITATS REPORT GIVES "FISH EYE VIEW" OF
NATIONAL WATERS

(Washington, DC) - The National Fish Habitat Board (www.fishhabitat.org
<http://www.fishhabitat.org/> ) today released a first-of-its-kind status of
fish habitats in the United States report as envisioned in the National Fish
Habitat Action Plan, an effort to protect, restore and enhance our nation's
aquatic habitats.  The report titled
<http://fishhabitat.org/images/documents/fishhabitatreport_012611.pdf>
THROUGH A FISH'S EYE: The Status of Fish Habitats In The United States 2010
summarizes the results of an unprecedented, nationwide assessment of the
human effects on fish habitat in the rivers and estuaries of the United
States.

Through a Fish's Eye, provides an important picture of the challenges and
opportunities facing fish and those engaged in fish habitat conservation
efforts. Urbanization, agriculture, dams, culverts, pollution and other
human impacts have resulted in specific areas of degraded habitat where
restoration is most likely needed to bring back the healthy habitats and
fishing opportunities that once existed. Addressing degraded habitat also
requires reducing or eliminating the sources of degradation mentioned in
this report, through best management practices, land use planning, and
engaging landowners, businesses, and local communities in the effort. 

The assessment detailed in the report assigns watersheds and estuaries a
risk of current habitat degradation ranging from very low to very high.
These results allow comparisons of aquatic habitats across the nation and
within 14 sub-regions. The results also identify some of the major sources
of habitat degradation that plague waterways across the nation.  

Overall, 27 percent of the miles of stream in the lower 48 states are at
high or very high risk of current habitat degradation and 44 percent are at
low or very low risk.  Twenty-nine percent of stream miles in the lower 48
states are at moderate risk of current habitat degradation. 

Fifty-three percent of estuaries (by area) are at high or very high risk of
current habitat degradation, while 23 percent of estuaries are at low or
very low risk of current habitat degradation. Marine habitats of the United
States tend to be most degraded near the coast, where they are most affected
by human activity.

The goal of the national assessment was to estimate disturbance levels to
fish habitats in rivers and estuaries from information about human
activities occurring in the watersheds and the local areas affecting each
aquatic habitat.  This approach is supported by a large body of scientific
research showing that human disturbances to the land transfer to receiving
waters and contribute to disturbance in downstream fish habitats in rivers,
estuaries, and the ocean.

 While the specific analytical approaches used to assess habitats in the
lower-48 states, Alaska, Hawaii and U.S. estuaries differed slightly, the
end product of each analysis was similar-an estimate of the risk that
discrete habitat units will be degraded due to current human activities on
the landscape.

"This report identifies areas where those efforts are most needed and points
to areas where fish habitat is most likely still intact and should be
protected to maintain its value for fish and other aquatic organisms.
Resources for fish habitat conservation are limited, especially for the next
few years," said Kelly Hepler, Chairman of the National Fish Habitat Board.


"Fish Habitat partnerships ensure coordinated work around specific habitat
challenges," said Eric Schwaab, Assistant Administrator for NOAA Fisheries.
"This information will help bring strategic focus to conservation efforts
and allow rigorous measurement of results."

"This report clearly illustrates the need for strategic use of existing
resources through partnerships that can identify the most effective use of
funds and help the nation as a whole make progress in fish habitat
conservation," said U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Acting Director Rowan
Gould.. "There are many major threats to the health of fish habitat and the
National Fish Habitat Action plan helps to focus and leverage available
funds, pool technical expertise, and enlist new partners to address the
challenges to fish habitat."

Key findings from the "Through a Fish's Eye: Status of Fish Habitats" report
include:

 Habitats with a very high risk of current habitat degradation include those
in or near urban development, livestock grazing, agriculture, point source
pollution or areas with high numbers of active mines and dams. Specific
locations that stand out as regions at high risk of current habitat
degradation include: the urban corridor between Boston and Atlanta; the
Central Midwestern states of Iowa, Illinois, Indiana and Ohio; the
Mississippi River Basin, including habitats adjacent to the lower
Mississippi River in Arkansas, Mississippi and Louisiana; habitats in
eastern Texas; and habitats in Central California and along the Columbia
River in Oregon and Washington.   

Areas that stand out as being at very low risk of current habitat
degradation include rural areas in New England and the Great Lakes states;
many habitats throughout the Mountain, Southwest and Pacific Coast states;
and most of Alaska. It should be noted that not all water and land
management issues could be addressed in the assessment, so some of the areas
mapped as at low risk of current habitat degradation actually may be at
higher risk due to disturbance factors not assessed. For example, most arid
regions of the western United States were found to be at low risk of current
habitat degradation. 

Estuaries in the mid-Atlantic have a very high risk of habitat degradation
related to polluted run-off and other effects of the intense urbanization
and agriculture in this area. The estuaries of southern California also have
a high risk of current habitat degradation for similar reasons. Estuaries in
the north Pacific and downeast Maine have a low risk of current habitat
degradation.

The release of this report is also accompanied with the release of a map
viewer, which offers the maps that are in the report in greater detail.  The
National Fish Habitat Action Plan map and data web tool
(www.nbii.gov/far/nfhap) was developed by the U.S. Geological Survey's
Biological Informatics Program under guidance of the National Fish Habitat
Action Plan Science and Data Committee. This tool not only enables users to
see multiple views depicting the condition of stream and coastal habitats
across the country, but also means that users can access more detailed
information at finer scales, as well as the option to download data files
and map services. 

To read the report in its entirety or download a PDF, visit
www.fishhabitat.org <http://www.fishhabitat.org/>  or  go to
http://fishhabitat.org/images/documents/fishhabitatreport_012611.pdf to view
the PDF.

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Published by the National Fish Habitat Action Plan,
444 North Capitol Street NW, Suite 725,
Washington, DC 20001, Phone - 301.713.4300 x 171 <http://FishHabitat.org> 
FishHabitat.org
Thursday, 14 April 2011

 




-- 
Tim Guilfoile
Deputy Director
Sierra Club Water Sentinels
3078 Elmwood Dr.
Edgewood, KY 41017
(859) 426-1978
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