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A History of Conservation in the United States
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Exploitation - Wasting l A. When people were few there was little need for conservation 1. Wise management is beginning to replace short sighted exploitation.
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Exploitation - wasting l 2. World population is doubling every decade. l 3. Accelerate progress is natural resource management.
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History of conservation movement l A. Wildlife Management 1. When the settlers came the colonies were covered largely by mature forests broken only by streams, marshes, and natural meadows.
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History of conservation movement 2. Forests could support vast flocks of passenger pigeons 3. Streams supported beaver populations
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History of conservation movement 4. Marshes support large flocks of waterfowl 5. Deer, turkey, quail, and many other important game animals require clearings.
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History of conservation movement 6. Hunters could depopulate deer herds along the coast a. further inland they found fewer deer and hunting was less successful.
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Regulations l 1. 1639 regulations on deer hunting were imposed by Newport, RI. l 2. 1698 Connecticut and Massachusetts imposed limits on deer hunting, by then deer herds were almost gone in those areas.
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Regulations l 3. 1844 New York Sporting Club formed. A. became the New York State Game Protective Society. B. promoted restrictions against market hunters
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Regulations l 4. 1865 first fish and game commission formed in Massachusetts.
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Market hunters l 1. Hunting and trapping for fur and meat animals became big business overnight. l 2. Market hunters found that their quarry could be taken all year long.
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Market hunters l 3. Passenger pigeons could be killed most easily during the nesting season. A. led to extinction
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Market hunters l Buffalo herds came close to extinction for the same reasons
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The road back l 1. The Lacey Act 1900, first federal act dealing with wildlife was passed. A. made interstate transport of game taken against the law a federal crime.
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The road back b. killed market hunting and saved many species from destruction l 2. 1916 US and Great Britain signed the Migratory Bird Treaty
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The road back l 3.1918 Federal Migratory Bird Act was passed a. protection of migratory waterfowl that breed in Canada and fly across the US each year.
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The road back l 4. 1933 Aldo Leopold published Game Management l 5. 1934 Duck Stamp Act was passed
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The road back a. first year raised revenues of $600,000 b. now raise up to $6 million a year c. finance numerous projects to protect and expand North American waterfowl population.
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The road back l 6. 1940 US Fish and Wildlife Service of the Department of the Interior formed.
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The road back l 7. Most conservationist efforts have been led and funded by hunters and fisherman and have made possible much of our wildlife abundance.
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Forest Management l 1. Timber Management a. 5,000 years ago in China b. 4,000 years ago in Egypt
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Forest Management c. Romans imported wood from their conquered lands before the birth of Christ d. 1,000 A.D. Europeans were running our of wood
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Forest Management l 2. 1626 First ordinance controlling sale of timber passed in Plymouth Colony l 3. 1650 several colonies passed laws against burning forests.
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Forest Management l 4. Late 1700s and early 1800s preservation centered around saving live oaks for building war ships a. this practice ended during the Civil War
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Forest Management l 5. US forests produced about a billion board feet of lumber in 1840 l 6. 1869 35 billion board feet. l 7. 1906 46 billion board feet.
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Forest Management l 8. Forests were harvested to pay for other enterprises or were cleared and burned for farming.
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Forest Management l 9. 1875 the American Forestry Association organized to promote timber culture and forestry
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Forest Management l 10. Forestry agent appointed to the USDA l 11. Forestry office became Division of Forestry of USDA in 1881.
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Forest Management l 12. 1891 Congress created forest reserves from public lands a. 1900 33 million acres of forest reserves b. controlled under the Department of the Interior
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Forest Management l 13. Gifford Pinchot head of USDA Forestry Department in 1898 l 14. 1905 became US Forest Service
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Forest Management l 15. Pinchot and T. Roosevelt expanded the national forest service, covered 182 million acres in 1983.
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Forest Management l 16. The Weeks Law 1911 gave the President authority to purchase forest lands for river water shed protection
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Forest Management a. linked forestry with soil and water conservation, waterway transportation and flood control.
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Forest Management l 17. WWI expanded federal role in the forestry business. A. Timber was needed for the war and thousands of soldiers were used to harvest it.
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Forest Management l 18. Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) was involved in forestry work during the Great Depression
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Forest Management l 19. WWII and post war house building created another expansion in the need for timber.
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Soil Conservation l 1. Early mentality was to farm today leave tomorrow to take care of itself.
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Soil Conservation l 2. Wherever land was tillable it was cleared for agricultural production without regard for its potential a. hillsides in Georgia were row cropped
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Soil Conservation b. grasslands in the southwest were overgrazed. l 3. Early soil conservation meant preventing gully and sheet erosion.
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Soil Conservation l 4. 1928 first USDA soil conservation bulletin published Soil Erosion - A National Menace l 5. 1933 Soil Erosion Service established (Dept of Int)
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Soil Conservation l 6. 1935 SES moved to the Dept of Ag and changed name to Soil Conservation Service (SCS)
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Soil Conservation l 7. 1936 developed a system for giving grants to farmers active in conservation to pay for terraces, tilling, and drainage systems.
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Soil Conservation a. regulated by USDAs Agricultural Stabilization and Conservation Service (ASCS)
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Soil Conservation l 8. 1937 President F D Roosevelt established soil conservation districts within each state
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Water Management l 1. 1879 Mississippi River Commission set up to help states improve the river as a waterway.
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Water Management l 2. Rivers and Harbors Acts of 1917 and 1927 maintain navigable waterways. l 3. 1825 Erie Canal completed to connect the Great Lakes with the Hudson River.
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Water Management l 4. Early emphasis was not on conservation but on transportation l 5. Late 1920s federal govt began to assume some responsibility for flood control.
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Water Management l 6. 1936 Flood Control Act authorized SCS to develop plans for upstream soil and water conservation to reduce sedimentation and flooding.
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Water Management l 7. 1954 Watershed Protection and Flood Prevention Act made state and local responsible for decision making.
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Water Management l 8. Federal legislation in the 1960s and 1970s emphasized health concerns of waste water treatment
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Water Management l 9. Low water tables in the western states have resulted from deep-well drilling.
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