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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Wednesday, March 26, 2008

State gets $2.1 million to buy coastline, forests, wetlands

Advertiser Staff

The state Department of Land and Natural Resources has received $2.1 million in federal grants to help acquire 4,198 acres on the islands of Hawai'i and O'ahu to protect coastal and forest habitats, wetlands and watersheds, the state announced yesterday.

The funding is from the federal Department of the Interior's Cooperative Endangered Species Conservation Fund Federal Recovery Land Acquisition Grants program.

Secretary of the Interior Dirk Kempthorne outlined the nationwide award of more than $57.9 million in grants through the fund to 23 states and one territory to support conservation planning and acquisition of vital habitat for threatened and endangered fish, wildlife and plants.

"Endangered sea turtle nesting areas, forest habitat for over 90 rare species including the largest known population of 'elepaio in the Wai'anae mountains, and wetlands and watershed that are home to endangered Hawaiian waterbirds and native plants will all be protected with the help of these federal funds," said Laura H. Thielen, DLNR chairwoman.

Authorized by Section 6 of the Endangered Species Act, the grants enable states to work with private landowners, conservation groups and other agencies to initiate conservation planning efforts and acquire and protect habitat to support the conservation of threatened and endangered species.

This year, the Cooperative Endangered Species Fund provided states $8.6 million through the Habitat Conservation Planning Assistance Grants Program, $35.3 million through the Habitat Conservation Plan Land Acquisition Grants Program and $14 million through the Recovery Land Acquisition Grants Program, which includes approximately $1.5 million of funds carried over from previous years or recovered from previous projects.

The state will receive its funding through the Recovery Land Acquisition Grants Program for the following projects:

  • Kawa Bay acquisition: $1 million. The County of Hawai'i will receive $1 million in its effort to acquire and permanently protect approximately 551 acres in the district of Ka'u along the southeast coast of the island of Hawai'i. The county also has applied for $1.5 million in funding from the State Legacy Lands Act Program. The county will kick in another $3.5 million from its open-space fund to complete the estimated $6 million purchase. The property provides approximately two miles of pristine coastline containing nesting beaches for the endangered Hawaiian hawksbill turtle and protecting offshore feeding areas for the threatened green sea turtle. It will connect other recent county acquisitions at Honu'apo Bay and state-owned property to connect four to five miles of coastline makai of the highway.

  • Honouliuli Preserve acquisition: $361,196. This funding will contribute toward the acquisition and permanent protection of the 3,582-acre Honouliuli preserve, in the 'Ewa district of O'ahu. The Department of Land and Natural Resources, Division of Forestry and Wildlife, The Trust for Public Land, The Nature Conservancy and the Department of the Army are working to raise funding toward the acquisition of the area, which will protect habitat for more than 90 rare species, including 38 threatened and endangered plants, one endangered bird, one endangered pomace fly and two endangered tree snails. There are 15 species (four of them endangered) that can only be found on the Honouliuli parcel.

  • Hamakua Marsh Watershed acquisition: $740,000. The goal of the Hamakua Marsh Watershed project is to acquire and permanently protect 65 acres of wetland and watershed lands and add them to the existing Hamakua Marsh Wildlife Sanctuary in Kailua, which is administered by the Department of Land and Natural Resources, Division of Forestry and Wildlife. This acquisition will enhance ongoing recovery efforts for endangered Hawaiian waterbirds and plant species in the Hamakua Marsh. Species benefited include Hawaiian stilt, Hawaiian coot, Hawaiian gallinule, Hawaiian duck and the federally listed sedge Cyperus trachysanthos. Partners in the protection and restoration of this area include the Hamakua Marsh Ecosystem Restoration and Community Development Project and the Hawai'i Chapter of the Wildlife Society.

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