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Range-wide Conservation Strategy for the
       Gopher Tortoise (DRAFT)
WEBINAR Overview
                            AGENDA
   Stacy Shelton (Moderator)
     Overview of USFWS Southeast “Candidate Conservation” Website.
     Questions after each major section of webinar, raise hands.

   Elsa Haubold (Co-Host, SEAFWA Wildlife Diversity Committee)
     Importance of Partnerships in Gopher Tortoise Conservation.
     Genesis of the draft strategy - USFWS/GA & FL.

   Matt Hinderliter (Co-Host, USFWS Lead Biologist for the Gopher
    Tortoise)
     Threats assessment based on the five listing factors.
     Objectives and action items to address the threats.
     Tracking implementation by partners.
     Comment submission.


    Matt & Elsa will lead the presentation and answer questions.
Gopher Tortoise Webinar Presentation
Co-host contact information

Southeastern Association of Fish & Wildlife Agencies (SEAFWA):
Elsa M. Haubold, PhD
Section Leader - Species Conservation Planning Section
Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
& Chair, SEAFWA Wildlife Diversity Committee
Elsa.Haubold@MyFWC.com


U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (USFWS):
Matt Hinderliter
Range-Wide Gopher Tortoise Lead Biologist
Mississippi Ecological Services Field Office
fw4gophertortoise@fws.gov
Purpose of the Conservation Strategy:
 Lays out a preliminary course of action for the conservation of
  the gopher tortoise

 It is our hope that partner implementation of this plan, with
  progress evaluated annually, will provide the information
  needed to address the threats to the species

 Intended to be an adaptive document that will be revised as
  new information is received from the public and partners
Layout of the Strategy:
Overview: Brief background of our information on the species,
including population estimates, trends, and population status range-wide
(specific life history traits, range, and habitat descriptions can be found
in Appendix 2).
Threats to the species: Organized by Endangered Species Act (ESA)
listing factors, this section summarizes the primary threats to the
species; the majority of this information is taken from the “12-Month
Finding on a Petition to List the Gopher Tortoise as Threatened in the
Eastern Portion of its Range.” (July 27, 2011).
Current conservation efforts/Summary of conservation status
Conservation objectives and action plans: Organized primarily by
ESA listing factors, this section identifies the specific information,
commitments, etc. necessary to address the threats to the species, and
those actions, that if effectively implemented, could preclude the need
to list the species.
Status of the Species: What do we know?

Effectively assessing the status (i.e., whether it is increasing,
decreasing, or stable) of the gopher tortoise throughout its range
requires evaluation of:


       Distribution of populations

       How many tortoises/population

       How many populations

       Population demography

       Trends in population growth
An adult, juvenile, and hatchling (L-R) gopher tortoise
Status of the species
From population modeling efforts (referenced in the 12-month
finding), we can draw two very general conclusions:

       1. Gopher tortoise populations are likely to decline in the
          future under a wide array of demographic and
          environmental conditions that exist today.

       2. Gopher tortoise populations, although declining, and in
          some cases functionally extinct, will persist for 100 to 200
          years.

The effect of these may be that tortoises will be seen for long
periods of time throughout their range, not because their
populations are stable or increasing, but because they are long-
lived.
Threats to the species (5 ESA listing factors)
(A) The present or threatened destruction, modification, or
    curtailment of its habitat or range;

(B) Overutilization for commercial, recreational, scientific,
    or educational purposes;

(C) Disease or predation;

(D) The inadequacy of existing regulatory mechanisms;

(E) Other natural or manmade factors affecting its continued
    existence (climate change, herbicides, road mortality,
    invasive species).
(A) The present or threatened destruction, modification, or
    curtailment of its habitat or range;

(Examples, not an all-inclusive list)

Activities:
Road construction, urbanization, mining, sand extraction,
silvicultural or agricultural conversion, fire exclusion (or insufficient
fire management)

Direct or indirect results to habitat:
Direct conversion/loss of habitat, shrub & hardwood
encroachment, invasive species establishment, canopy closure, and
decline of available forage & groundcover

Direct or indirect results to species:
Road and other direct mortality, reproductive isolation, small and
discontinuous populations, edge effects (such as increased
predation), displacement of tortoises to undesirable habitat
Poor-quality gopher tortoise habitat: High tree density
(lack of forage and sunlight for basking/egg incubation)
Poor-quality gopher tortoise habitat: Established invasive
species (cogongrass) – native forage species outcompeted
Poor-quality gopher tortoise habitat: High shrub density
(lack of forage and sunlight for basking/egg incubation)
How action items are organized in the Strategy:
 Objective 1: Address the present and threatened destruction, modification,
  or curtailment of gopher tortoise habitat (related to Listing Factor A)

 Objective 2: Address issues related to overutilization for commercial,
  recreational, scientific, or educational purposes (related to Listing Factor B)

 Objective 3: Investigate and mitigate disease and predation effects (related
  to Listing Factor C)

 Objective 4: Investigate range-wide effective regulatory mechanisms
  (related to Listing Factor D)

 Objective 5: Determine population viability parameters (additional scientific
  information necessary to address Listing Factor A)
Objective 1: Address the present and threatened destruction,
modification, or curtailment of gopher tortoise habitat

Examples include:

 Identify, prioritize, and protect viable tortoise populations;

 Increase the size and/or carrying capacity of viable population
  areas through applied management, land acquisition, or
  incentives to adjacent landowners

 Working with partners/land managers, maximize the amount of
  acreage appropriately maintained by prescribed fire, define
  DFCs and BMPs
High-quality gopher tortoise habitat (Joseph W. Jones Ecological
  Research Center at Ichauway): plentiful and diverse forage,
                      abundant sunlight
Habitat management and silvicultural activities can be compatible
              with gopher tortoise conservation
Objective 2: Address issues related to overutilization for
commercial, recreational, scientific, or educational purposes

 Work with partners to convert the two remaining rattlesnake
  round-ups to wildlife festivals
Objective 3: Investigate and mitigate disease and predation
effects

 Initiate a risk assessment for current disease testing
  mechanisms

 Identify and reduce the factors most negatively impacting
  juvenile tortoise recruitment, specifically predation effects from
  invasive and/or nuisance predators
Objective 4: Investigate range-wide effective regulatory
mechanisms

 Adopt mitigation strategies across the range that address the
  ongoing need for relocation of tortoises, but do it in a way as to
  minimize loss of preferred habitat, and maximize site fidelity
Objective 5: Determine population viability parameters

 Establish consensus within the research community on what
  defines a viable gopher tortoise population

 Establish consensus on the number and distribution of viable
  gopher tortoise populations necessary such that the species in
  the eastern range would not require listing

 Establish a consistent mechanism of proper surveying &
  monitoring techniques and schedules, to accurately assess
  population levels, trends, and responses to management
Filling out the action item spreadsheet:

        Objectives & action items
        Primary threats to the species
        Actions needed to address specific threats
        Policy/regulatory and implementation partners
        Leads (FWS & State agency) and due dates
Our “roadmap” of how to follow our progress
Types of comments on the strategy:
Should there be additional action items, or has there been
additional research/agreements done recently that would address
the current action items?

Help to identify the appropriate people/organizations to address
and implement the action items on the strategy

Comments should be received by September 15, 2012.
Appropriate revisions will be made and a second draft of the
Strategy circulated by October 1, 2012.

Please submit comments to: fw4gophertortoise@fws.gov
THANK YOU!
Additional identical webinars will be held September 5 @ 2pm EST,
                  and September 6 @ 10am EST.

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Gopher Tortoise Webinar Presentation

  • 1. Range-wide Conservation Strategy for the Gopher Tortoise (DRAFT)
  • 2. WEBINAR Overview AGENDA  Stacy Shelton (Moderator)  Overview of USFWS Southeast “Candidate Conservation” Website.  Questions after each major section of webinar, raise hands.  Elsa Haubold (Co-Host, SEAFWA Wildlife Diversity Committee)  Importance of Partnerships in Gopher Tortoise Conservation.  Genesis of the draft strategy - USFWS/GA & FL.  Matt Hinderliter (Co-Host, USFWS Lead Biologist for the Gopher Tortoise)  Threats assessment based on the five listing factors.  Objectives and action items to address the threats.  Tracking implementation by partners.  Comment submission. Matt & Elsa will lead the presentation and answer questions.
  • 4. Co-host contact information Southeastern Association of Fish & Wildlife Agencies (SEAFWA): Elsa M. Haubold, PhD Section Leader - Species Conservation Planning Section Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission & Chair, SEAFWA Wildlife Diversity Committee Elsa.Haubold@MyFWC.com U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (USFWS): Matt Hinderliter Range-Wide Gopher Tortoise Lead Biologist Mississippi Ecological Services Field Office fw4gophertortoise@fws.gov
  • 5. Purpose of the Conservation Strategy:  Lays out a preliminary course of action for the conservation of the gopher tortoise  It is our hope that partner implementation of this plan, with progress evaluated annually, will provide the information needed to address the threats to the species  Intended to be an adaptive document that will be revised as new information is received from the public and partners
  • 6. Layout of the Strategy: Overview: Brief background of our information on the species, including population estimates, trends, and population status range-wide (specific life history traits, range, and habitat descriptions can be found in Appendix 2). Threats to the species: Organized by Endangered Species Act (ESA) listing factors, this section summarizes the primary threats to the species; the majority of this information is taken from the “12-Month Finding on a Petition to List the Gopher Tortoise as Threatened in the Eastern Portion of its Range.” (July 27, 2011). Current conservation efforts/Summary of conservation status Conservation objectives and action plans: Organized primarily by ESA listing factors, this section identifies the specific information, commitments, etc. necessary to address the threats to the species, and those actions, that if effectively implemented, could preclude the need to list the species.
  • 7. Status of the Species: What do we know? Effectively assessing the status (i.e., whether it is increasing, decreasing, or stable) of the gopher tortoise throughout its range requires evaluation of:  Distribution of populations  How many tortoises/population  How many populations  Population demography  Trends in population growth
  • 8. An adult, juvenile, and hatchling (L-R) gopher tortoise
  • 9. Status of the species From population modeling efforts (referenced in the 12-month finding), we can draw two very general conclusions: 1. Gopher tortoise populations are likely to decline in the future under a wide array of demographic and environmental conditions that exist today. 2. Gopher tortoise populations, although declining, and in some cases functionally extinct, will persist for 100 to 200 years. The effect of these may be that tortoises will be seen for long periods of time throughout their range, not because their populations are stable or increasing, but because they are long- lived.
  • 10. Threats to the species (5 ESA listing factors) (A) The present or threatened destruction, modification, or curtailment of its habitat or range; (B) Overutilization for commercial, recreational, scientific, or educational purposes; (C) Disease or predation; (D) The inadequacy of existing regulatory mechanisms; (E) Other natural or manmade factors affecting its continued existence (climate change, herbicides, road mortality, invasive species).
  • 11. (A) The present or threatened destruction, modification, or curtailment of its habitat or range; (Examples, not an all-inclusive list) Activities: Road construction, urbanization, mining, sand extraction, silvicultural or agricultural conversion, fire exclusion (or insufficient fire management) Direct or indirect results to habitat: Direct conversion/loss of habitat, shrub & hardwood encroachment, invasive species establishment, canopy closure, and decline of available forage & groundcover Direct or indirect results to species: Road and other direct mortality, reproductive isolation, small and discontinuous populations, edge effects (such as increased predation), displacement of tortoises to undesirable habitat
  • 12. Poor-quality gopher tortoise habitat: High tree density (lack of forage and sunlight for basking/egg incubation)
  • 13. Poor-quality gopher tortoise habitat: Established invasive species (cogongrass) – native forage species outcompeted
  • 14. Poor-quality gopher tortoise habitat: High shrub density (lack of forage and sunlight for basking/egg incubation)
  • 15. How action items are organized in the Strategy:  Objective 1: Address the present and threatened destruction, modification, or curtailment of gopher tortoise habitat (related to Listing Factor A)  Objective 2: Address issues related to overutilization for commercial, recreational, scientific, or educational purposes (related to Listing Factor B)  Objective 3: Investigate and mitigate disease and predation effects (related to Listing Factor C)  Objective 4: Investigate range-wide effective regulatory mechanisms (related to Listing Factor D)  Objective 5: Determine population viability parameters (additional scientific information necessary to address Listing Factor A)
  • 16. Objective 1: Address the present and threatened destruction, modification, or curtailment of gopher tortoise habitat Examples include:  Identify, prioritize, and protect viable tortoise populations;  Increase the size and/or carrying capacity of viable population areas through applied management, land acquisition, or incentives to adjacent landowners  Working with partners/land managers, maximize the amount of acreage appropriately maintained by prescribed fire, define DFCs and BMPs
  • 17. High-quality gopher tortoise habitat (Joseph W. Jones Ecological Research Center at Ichauway): plentiful and diverse forage, abundant sunlight
  • 18. Habitat management and silvicultural activities can be compatible with gopher tortoise conservation
  • 19. Objective 2: Address issues related to overutilization for commercial, recreational, scientific, or educational purposes  Work with partners to convert the two remaining rattlesnake round-ups to wildlife festivals
  • 20. Objective 3: Investigate and mitigate disease and predation effects  Initiate a risk assessment for current disease testing mechanisms  Identify and reduce the factors most negatively impacting juvenile tortoise recruitment, specifically predation effects from invasive and/or nuisance predators
  • 21. Objective 4: Investigate range-wide effective regulatory mechanisms  Adopt mitigation strategies across the range that address the ongoing need for relocation of tortoises, but do it in a way as to minimize loss of preferred habitat, and maximize site fidelity
  • 22. Objective 5: Determine population viability parameters  Establish consensus within the research community on what defines a viable gopher tortoise population  Establish consensus on the number and distribution of viable gopher tortoise populations necessary such that the species in the eastern range would not require listing  Establish a consistent mechanism of proper surveying & monitoring techniques and schedules, to accurately assess population levels, trends, and responses to management
  • 23. Filling out the action item spreadsheet:  Objectives & action items  Primary threats to the species  Actions needed to address specific threats  Policy/regulatory and implementation partners  Leads (FWS & State agency) and due dates
  • 24. Our “roadmap” of how to follow our progress
  • 25. Types of comments on the strategy: Should there be additional action items, or has there been additional research/agreements done recently that would address the current action items? Help to identify the appropriate people/organizations to address and implement the action items on the strategy Comments should be received by September 15, 2012. Appropriate revisions will be made and a second draft of the Strategy circulated by October 1, 2012. Please submit comments to: fw4gophertortoise@fws.gov
  • 26. THANK YOU! Additional identical webinars will be held September 5 @ 2pm EST, and September 6 @ 10am EST.