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The Nature Conservancy-PA Protects 127 Acres On Kittatinny Ridge In Schuylkill County
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On June 29, The Nature Conservancy in Pennsylvania and Delaware announced it has acquired 127 acres of forestland in West Penn Township, Schuylkill County, along the Kittatinny Ridge and adjacent to the Appalachian Trail.

The purchase was made with financial assistance from the Department of Conservation and Natural Resources through the Keystone Recreation, Park and Conservation Fund, the Game Commission and the Appalachian Trail Conservancy.

The parcel was transferred to the Game Commission and has been added to State Game Lands 217 and is directly adjacent to the Appalachian National Scenic Trail. Its protection will help buffer the Trail and protect the wilderness experience along the Trail.

“The protection of this parcel represents another vital move to conserve the landscape that scientists have identified as critical to the future of a diversity of species by enabling them to migrate and adapt to a changing climate,” says Lori Brennan, Executive Director for The Nature Conservancy in Pennsylvania and Delaware.

The Kittatinny Ridge-- also known as Blue Mountain in some regions-- runs through Pennsylvania for 185 miles, from the Delaware River to the Mason-Dixon Line. The Ridge is the first prominent landscape feature you encounter as you move north or west from Philadelphia, and it marks the entrance to Pennsylvania’s Ridge and Valley region.

It is one of the Commonwealth’s most treasured landscapes, providing the scenic backdrop to life in twelve counties.

The Kittatinny Ridge is designated as a Globally Important Bird Area. As a premier raptor migration corridor in the northeastern U.S., one of the leading such sites in the world, it is used by tens of thousands of hawks, eagles, and falcons each fall.

The Nature Conservancy is focused on continuing to protect these critical migratory bird corridors.

“The conservation of this property will provide additional open space for public recreation and further protect an important wildlife corridor,” says Victor Motts, land protection specialist with The Nature Conservancy.

The Nature Conservancy is a global conservation organization working in 79 countries and territories that is dedicated to conserving the lands and waters on which all life depends.

This purchase was supported through the Wild East Action Fund, which seeks to accelerate the pace of conservation within the Appalachian Trail landscape.

For more information on programs, initiatives and other special events, visit the PA Chapter of The Nature Conservancy website.  Click Here to sign up for updates from TNC, Like them on Facebook, Follow them on Twitter and Join them on InstagramClick Here to become a member.

Related Articles This Week:

-- House Speaker Cutler: Republicans Will First Raid Dedicated Funds To Balance Budget In November

-- DCNR Seeking Online Public Input On Pennsylvania’s Public & Private Forests

-- DCNR Reminds State Park Visitors Of Possible Crowding This Summer

-- Rural, Older Women Offer Insight On Why Nature Is Important When Aging In Place; Coping With Pandemic

-- DCNR, Health Announce Expansion Of Free Sunscreen Program At State Park Beaches

-- July 3 Take Five Fridays With Pam, PA Parks & Forests Foundation

-- TreeVitalize Pittsburgh: Apply Now For Spring 2021 Tree Plantings In Pittsburgh

-- PA Land Trust Assn. September Building Trails In Wetlands & Wet Areas Workshops In Allegheny, Cumberland Counties

-- Pike Conservation District Highlights Resources For Managing Small Woodlots, Protecting Clean Water

-- Gov. Pinchot's Grey Towers Historic Site Festival Of Wood Canceled In Pike County

[Posted: June 29, 2020]


7/6/2020

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