President Bush uses Cornell's recommendations in national strategy to conserve birds
By Miyoko Chu
In a positive step for bird conservation, President George W. Bush has announced a new national strategy to preserve key habitats for migratory birds. Speaking at the Patuxent Research Refuge in Laurel, Md., Oct. 20, he said that the birds "fascinate and bring joy to millions of our citizens."
In formulating the new policies, Bush drew upon recommendations from a report spearheaded by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology in partnership with leaders from other conservation organizations, including the National Audubon Society, Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies, The Nature Conservancy and PRBO Conservation Science.
"Our birds have been pummeled by urban and agricultural sprawl, rampant pesticide use and wetland degradation for decades," said John Fitzpatrick, director of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. "Many species today are down to just a third of their population sizes in the 1960s."
Fitzpatrick led the effort to draft the report to the White House, pointing out dramatic declines in bird populations and recommending six actions that the federal government could take to restore North American birds: Expanding private and public support for national wildlife refuges, increasing support for public-private conservation partnerships called Joint Ventures, expanding conservation incentives for private landowners, enhancing protections for coastal and marine migratory birds, partnering with Mexico to secure key wintering habitats and instituting a "State of the Birds" report to measure environmental health.
Bush named initiatives based on all six recommended actions. These included:
"We are impressed and heartened by these bold initiatives," said Fitzpatrick. "The president and his staff are closely following many direct recommendations of the conservation community."
To watch Bush's address on video or read the transcript, visit http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2007/10/20071020-2.html.
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