Watershed Biodiversity Initiative

Watershed Biodiversity Initiative Our organization has undertaken an unprecedented multi-year scientific study of wildlife habitat across Colorado's Roaring Fork Watershed.

The results will help our communities make informed decisions about which lands to protect and restore.

The Roaring Fork Watershed Biodiversity & Connectivity Study is complete and you can explore it online! Here's how:1) Re...
12/27/2022

The Roaring Fork Watershed Biodiversity & Connectivity Study is complete and you can explore it online! Here's how:

1) Read the final report on the Roaring Fork Watershed Biodiversity and Connectivity Study at Colorado Natural Heritage Program's website. https://cnhp.colostate.edu/projects/roaring-fork-study/

2) The most sophisticated and interactive version of the Biodiversity Study requires ArcGIS software, version 10.2 or better, and a certain level of expertise. Contact Tom Cardamone at WBI ([email protected]) to explore accessing and “test driving” the Study.

3) A publicly accessible and interactive version of the Study that does not require special software or expertise will be available on The Colorado Natural Heritage Program website in early 2023 on the CODEX platform (Colorado Data Explorer) https://cnhp.colostate.edu/maps/codex/

New biodiversity study intended to guide land management and land use

WBI is thrilled to serve as the fiscal sponsor for an exciting new organization called Roaring Fork Safe Passages  (RFSP...
12/20/2022

WBI is thrilled to serve as the fiscal sponsor for an exciting new organization called Roaring Fork Safe Passages (RFSP). RFSP formed to create citizen advocacy in support of reducing vehicle wildlife collisions in the Roaring Fork Valley while knitting back together our watershed’s fragmented wildlife habitat.

To learn more, join RFSP’s mailing list, please visit https://www.roaringforksafepassages.org/

New nonprofit group aims to raise $150K by June for critical study

Have a listen to this Aspen Public Radio story sharing the latest from the Roaring Fork Watershed Biodiversity & Connect...
01/18/2022

Have a listen to this Aspen Public Radio story sharing the latest from the Roaring Fork Watershed Biodiversity & Connectivity Study. Thanks APR and Eleanor Bennett!

As the impacts of human development and the climate crisis worsen, native plants and animals like elk, deer and bighorn sheep are declining in our region. To identify what areas most need protection, a group of local stakeholders conducted a three-year biodiversity study of the nearly million-acre R...

Thanks for highlighting our efforts Keep It Colorado, and for all you do to support conservation of our state's critical...
01/10/2022

Thanks for highlighting our efforts Keep It Colorado, and for all you do to support conservation of our state's critical wildlife habitat!

A major study three years in the making will help identify what wildlife habitat is most critical to preserve in the nearly 1-million-acre Roaring Fork Watershed. The number of deer, elk and bighorn sheep are declining in the valley.

Remembering two of America's Leading Naturalists: E.O. Wilson & Tom LovejoyTwenty one years ago at New Year’s, rain soak...
01/03/2022

Remembering two of America's Leading Naturalists: E.O. Wilson & Tom Lovejoy

Twenty one years ago at New Year’s, rain soaked, we scrambled up an abandoned military tower to see columns of mist rising out of the Amazon rain forest. The downpour was moving away with the easterly trade winds and in the interval between storms, raucous flocks of macaws coursed below us, above the emerald canopy. Our venerable guide Tom Lovejoy was letting us experience the atmospheric engine of successive rains transformed to rising mists that repeated across the forest, pulling the jungle’s heat into the upper atmosphere. There, high westerly winds carried the warmth out over the Atlantic, warming and driving the Gulf Stream north to temper the climate of the British Isles and western Europe, including the South of France, which at the latitude of Maine would be much colder without the Amazon rainforest. Everything is connected, and when you see the heat engine working you feel its power. The power of intact biodiversity.

Tom Lovejoy and his colleague and mentor E. O. Wilson both died in late December 2021. They will forever be the godfather and father of biodiversity conservation. Jody and I knew them and treasure them and their legacies. Wilson studied and defined the intricate workings of nature from ants to the whole Earth - and he advocated for saving half the Earth’s wildness, because “Biodiversity as a whole forms a shield protecting each of the species that together compose it, ourselves included.” Lovejoy conducted the world’s largest/longest running (and ongoing) ecological experiment, the Forest Fragments Project in the Amazon, which demonstrates the critical importance of intact wild landscapes and the perils of ecosystem fragmentation.

Here in the Roaring From Watershed, inspired by these two great men in their lifetimes, and where conservation is a solid community value, their legacy is honored in many ways. One is marked by the collaboration of several individuals, organizations, and agencies: The Roaring Fork Watershed Biodiversity and Connectivity Study. (Read the 12/3/2021 Aspen Times cover story about our work here: https://www.aspentimes.com/news/study-aims-to-provide-helping-hands-to-deer-elk-and-bighorn-sheep-in-roaring-fork-valley/)

We could hope for another Lovejoy or a Wilson, or we can be encouraged to collective action by the words of Terry Tempest Williams, “Far better than to hope is to ask, what can I do today to make a small difference, and what can we do in community tomorrow to make a big difference?” Protecting and restoring biodiversity, for its intrinsic value, its value to humanity, and its tempering of climate change is just the right thing to make a big difference.

Sincerely,
Tom Cardamone
Executive Director

This is a big week for biodiversity in the Roaring Fork Watershed!Scientists from Colorado Natural Heritage Program are ...
06/16/2021

This is a big week for biodiversity in the Roaring Fork Watershed!

Scientists from Colorado Natural Heritage Program are back in our valley to ground-truth the habitat "finger-printing" models built from data they collected in 2019.

Stay tuned for updates from the field!

(Photo by Mark Fuller)

The local pincushion cactus don't seem to mind our current drought conditions. Generally found in arid zones between 600...
05/26/2021

The local pincushion cactus don't seem to mind our current drought conditions. Generally found in arid zones between 6000' and 9000' feet, they've been in brilliant bloom for the last two to three weeks.

This one had a visitor. Anyone recognize the wildlife?

05/17/2021

What could these three ospreys be arguing about? Nest design? Build location?? Something else???

In all seriousness, this video illustrates the importance of habitat quality... and perhaps quantity. This power-pole directly overlooks one of our local rivers. It's a prime nesting spot in that regard but less than perfect in most every other.

Protecting and restoring good habitat, in prime locations, is key to ensuring these critters have better options.

“When one tugs at a single thing in nature, he finds it attached to the rest of the world.”-John MuirWishing you a happy...
04/22/2021

“When one tugs at a single thing in nature, he finds it attached to the rest of the world.”-John Muir

Wishing you a happy Earth Day, and giving thanks to this wonderful planet that connects all creatures great and small.

Many of our watershed's low elevation trails open to seasonal use today. It's an exciting time of year for many of us wh...
04/16/2021

Many of our watershed's low elevation trails open to seasonal use today. It's an exciting time of year for many of us who like to get out in nature.

But perhaps most important to emphasize is that many seasonal trail closures remain in place - some for several more weeks. This is a critical time of year for many species. For elk in particular, their ability to calve in the absence of human activity plays a key role in the survival of their young.

This article gives a helpful list of the many seasonal wildlife closures that remain. Let's continue to give space to our wild friends as we begin to enjoy our springtime adventures.

A handful of trails in the middle and lower Roaring Fork Valley open today, but just because they are open doesn’t mean they should be ridden. Advocate groups are urging users to stay off muddy and wet trails.

Our partners at Colorado Parks and Wildlife have put together a fantastic video about the research they have been doing ...
03/24/2021

Our partners at Colorado Parks and Wildlife have put together a fantastic video about the research they have been doing to better understand recent declines in elk cow-calf ratio (a key herd health indicator). Much of that research is happening right here in the Roaring Fork Valley! This is an important piece of the puzzle we are all working so hard to solve!

Our researchers have set out to evaluate how human recreation may be influencing Colorado's elk populations and created a film titled "Emblems of the West" t...

“Save all the pieces” advised conservation scientist Aldo Leopold in 1949; It is “the first rule of intelligent tinkerin...
03/17/2021

“Save all the pieces” advised conservation scientist Aldo Leopold in 1949; It is “the first rule of intelligent tinkering.”

There are many pieces to the puzzle of supporting healthy wildlife populations. In order to survive, wildlife need enough of the right types of habitat, in the right places, with connectivity between.

That's where we come in. We've undertaken an unprecedented watershed-wide scientific study to help our communities better understand where those places are.

So we can protect them.
So we can restore them.
So we can reconnect them.

Find out more at: www.watershedbiodiversityinitiative.org



Photo by Mark Fuller.

Watershed Biodiversity Initiative

Address

Basalt, CO
81621

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