Texas Wetlands Project Receives National Award – Lake Havasu

by | Nov 11, 2004 | News | 0 comments

GALVESTON, Texas — A Texas effort to restore hundreds of acres of
ecologically important wetlands in the Delehide Cove area of West
Galveston Bay will receive one of two National Wetland Conservation
Awards to be bestowed this year at a June 30 ceremony in Washington,
D.C.

– Lake Havasu

The Delehide Cove team received a $939,862 grant from the National
Wetlands Conservation Grants Program of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service in December 2000. The grant, along with an additional federal
contribution of $50,000 from the USFWS Coastal Program, was matched
with funds and in-kind contributions from state and local sources that
included the Texas General Land Office’s Coastal Erosion Planning and
Response Act (CEPRA) Program, Galveston Bay Foundation, Galveston Bay
Estuary Program, Pirates Homeowners Association, Fish America
Foundation, Restore Americas Estuaries, NOAA Fisheries, Blackard
Development, Reliant Energy and Texas GenCo. A total of more than $2
million was provide from these federal and state contributors to
protect and restore the area’s coastal wetland habitat.

Approximately 8,100 linear feet of sand-filled geotextile tube
breakwaters were constructed to protect existing intertidal marsh,
tidal bayou, and subtidal flats from erosion. One year after
construction, 200 acres of habitat have been protected from erosion,
2.4 acres of sand flat have been restored, 3.2 acres of seagrass
habitat have been enhanced and 48 acres of salt marsh and open water
complex have been restored or enhanced. A total of 250 acres of
estuarine marsh complex in the West Bay area of Galveston Bay were
protected, and another 55 acres were restored or enhanced.

“It’s a well-deserved recognition of a partnership between federal,
state and non-profit organizations to achieve a conservation goal,”
said Larry McKinney, Ph.D. and TPWD coastal fisheries division
director. “I’m pleased that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has
recognized all that effort on a national level.”

Each year the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service gives two wetland
conservation awards, one to a team and one to an individual. Matt
Hogan, acting director of USFWS, will present the awards this year, and
Secretary of the Interior Gale Norton is expected to participate in the
ceremony.

– Lake Havasu

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