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FWC: Pine Island Sound on CWA list

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The Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) is going forward with a significant effort to conserve Florida’s most vulnerable wildlife throughout the state.

At its June meeting, the Commission recommended staff go ahead with efforts to establish a suite of new Critical Wildlife Areas (CWA) and modify five existing CWAs. Pine Island Sound is on the potential new CWA list.

CWAs are established by the FWC under a Florida Administrative Code rule to protect important wildlife concentrations from human disturbance during critical periods of their life cycles, such as breeding, feeding or migration.

“Those of us who are in the conservation business are also in the forever business,” said Commission Chairman Brian Yablonski. “This is something that as a Commissioner you will remember for the rest of your life. It is a chance to protect wildlife when they are at their most vulnerable.”

FWC staff identified the following potential CWAs:

Flagg Island, Franklin County;

Lanark Reef, Franklin County;

Withlacoochee State Forest Caves, Citrus County (6 caves);

Dot-Dash-Dit Islands, Manatee County;

Roberts Bay Islands, Sarasota County;

Pine Island Sound, Lee County (3 islands);

Estero Bay, Lee County (3 islands);

Stick Marsh Rookery, Brevard County (small area in NE corner of marsh);

BC49, Brevard County (spoil island in Indian River Lagoon);

Port Orange Colony, Volusia County (spoil island in Halifax River).

FWC staff requested modifications for these five existing CWAs:

George Causeway, Franklin County;

Alafia Banks, Hillsborough County;

Myakka River, Sarasota County;

Rookery Island, Collier County;

Bird Islands, Duval and Nassau counties.

All of the proposed CWAs would protect shorebirds, seabirds or wading birds except the Withlacoochee Caves, which would protect southeastern myotis and tricolored bats.

In addition to nesting birds, Lanark Reef also has a significant diamondback terrapin population which would benefit from CWA protections.

For a site to be established as a CWA, the landowner must support the designation and the land must host a significant concentration of wildlife subject to disturbance. All of the sites announced Wednesday, with the exception of Alafia Banks, occur at least in part within state-owned lands or waters.

The FWC will hold public workshops in each area to solicit public input on the proposals.

For miore information visit MyFWC.com/CWA.