Let's not stand by and watch butterfly become extinct.Byline: GUEST VIEWPOINT By John Allcott For The Register-Guard Though I've been a Eugenean for 27 years, my North Carolina North Carolina, state in the SE United States. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean (E), South Carolina and Georgia (S), Tennessee (W), and Virginia (N). Facts and Figures Area, 52,586 sq mi (136,198 sq km). Pop. roots brought to mind the story of the Coast Guard cutter dispatched to take a very pregnant woman from Ocracoke, a barrier island, 100 miles up the Atlantic coast to a hospital. Seasick, homesick, cold and wet, she made it. Later, babe in arms armed for war; in a state of hostility. See also: Arms , she confided in the Elizabethan English-flavored Outer Banks Outer Banks or the Banks, chain of sand barrier islands and peninsulas, c.175 mi (280 km), along the Atlantic coast of SE Va. and E N.C. accent: `If Oi'd knew'd then what Oi knew'd now, Oi'd stayed home and had my bye-bee in bed!' So it is with Fender's blue butterfly Fender's Blue (Icaricia icarioides fenderi) is an endangered subspecies of butterfly found only in the Willamette Valley of northwestern Oregon, United States. The species was first noticed in the 1920s but wasn't scientifically documented and named until 1931 by , placed on the federal endangered species endangered species, any plant or animal species whose ability to survive and reproduce has been jeopardized by human activities. In 1999 the U.S. government, in accordance with the U.S. list in 1999. Though this quite small animal is found in a few other sites in the Willamette Valley The Willamette Valley (pronounced [wɪˈlæ.mɪt], with the accent on the second syllable) is the region in northwest Oregon in the United States that surrounds the Willamette River as it proceeds northward from its , west Eugene is home to more than half of the known Fender's blue butterflies in the world. Several years ago, Congress designated wetlands as a national resource not to be filled, dammed or diked without compelling cause or permit. Just in time, as only one-thousandth of Oregon's wetlands prairie is left. In west Eugene, a wetlands mitigation banking system has struck a compromise between development pressure and the enterprise zone on the one hand, and protection of our last local remnant wetlands prairie on the other. Enter Kincaid's lupine lupine or lupin (l `pĭn), any species of the genus Lupinus, annual or perennial herbs or shrubs of the family Leguminosae (pulse family). , federally listed as a threatened
species, and the host plant for Fender's blue butterfly.
Kincaid's lupine lives on slightly higher ground than the wetlands
prairie floor. Like wetlands prairie, upland prairie was abundant in the
pre-agricultural Willamette Valley, and is down to less than
one-thousandth of its former presence.
In west Eugene, a very few upland prairie patches stretch in a stepping-stone arc between The Nature Conservancy Nature Conservancy, nonprofit organization established in 1951 to preserve or aid in the preservation of natural environments. It protects wilderness areas in the United States and Canada and is affiliated with similar groups in Latin America and the Caribbean. preserve near Bailey Hill and Gimple Hill roads to Fern Ridge Reservoir Fern Ridge Reservoir is a reservoir on the Long Tom River in the U.S. state of Oregon. The reservoir is located approximately 12 miles (19 km) west of Eugene on Oregon Route 126. Fern Ridge Reservoir is a U.S. . The several Kincaid's lupine sites, only some of which support Fenders, act as a DNA DNA: see nucleic acid. DNA or deoxyribonucleic acid One of two types of nucleic acid (the other is RNA); a complex organic compound found in all living cells and many viruses. It is the chemical substance of genes. highway for this butterfly gene transfer. Fender's ability to find a neighboring patch of lupine on this stepping-stone path and a mate is at the heart of their survival. Will sufficient genetic diversity be maintained, or will this be an arc of extinction? Our studies, submitted to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in response to its December 2005 recommendations for critical habitat, indicate both Kincaid's lupine and Fender's blue butterfly need more sites identified as critical habitat if these species are to recover. You might think these two linked species, which are wholly dependent on upland prairie, would have the strongest protections on publicly held city, state, or most assuredly, federally protected land. Unfortunately, Fender's, this one-inch wingspread, flitting flit intr.v. flit·ted, flit·ting, flits 1. To move about rapidly and nimbly. 2. To move quickly from one condition or location to another. n. 1. A fluttering or darting movement. little `here-there-and-gone' being, is disappearing before our eyes. Development in west Eugene, sanctioned by the state of Oregon and allowed by the city in its enterprise zone, is not planning for protection or restoration of the lupine and butterfly. A wetlands education center planned for city land near Danebo Avenue and West 11th Avenue is intended to increase appreciation for vanishing wetlands. Ironically, though, the site is mapped as upland prairie, and the center's 12 buildings would occupy a potentially critical stepping-stone for Fender's blue butterfly. The proposed West Eugene Parkway The West Eugene Parkway was a proposed re-alignment of Oregon Route 126 through the western parts of Eugene, Oregon and its suburbs. Highway 126 through western Eugene currently runs along several surface streets (including West 11th Avenue); this route is well-known in the Eugene is also slated to be built on and adjacent to upland prairie, and would cut across Fender's `DNA highway." Benton County recently was granted more than half a million federal dollars to create a local partnership among public and private stakeholders leading toward protections for Fender's blue butterfly, Kincaid's lupine and several other endangered species. This planning work is to be done in advance of anticipated development. Can creative, durable solutions for our own west Eugene area be found? We would like to say, in the manner of that brave mother of Ocracoke: `If we knew then what we know now, we'd help Fender's blue butterfly find a bed on Kincaid's lupine in upland prairie!' We will tell this and more of the fascinating story of this dainty and endangered butterfly. We will recognize some local heroes who are using shovels and research to stand up for these small blue beings. Come join us for these presentations at 7 p.m. Thursday at the Eugene Water & Electric Board community room. John Allcott is a physician and president of Preferred Futures, a group working to create economic and ecological balance with social equity in the southern Willamette Valley. |
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