If you live in SE CT, you may remember
reading articles about local projects to restore habitat for the New
England Cottontail (NEC) . From Voluntown and Pachaug Forest, to a
North Stonington Sportsmen’s club, this little rabbit is having an
impact….and now on Avalonia in Stonington as well.
These rabbits are not the commonly seen
lawn bunnies which are the non-native Eastern Cottontail.
YouTube video of the New England Cottontail Rabbit.
The rabbits in the news are our native ones and, due to competition and loss of habitat, they are candidates for being listed as endangered. As Connecticut has aged, farmlands reverted to shrublands which the rabbits liked. However, further age has turned the shrublands into forests, and the forested landscape does not provide the food and shelter necessary for the NEC. An impenetrable tangle of low growth, briers and vines that deter our visits, is precisely what the Cottontails need.
Many State
(DEEP), Federal(USFWS, USDA & NRCS) and local (Avalonia LandConservancy) agencies have come together to support and fund a
project on the Peck and Callahan Preserves in the northern portion of
Stonington. These lands are deep in the center of a core of mature
forests, and until now, have been barely thought about and were not
accessible to the public because of their location. A population of
the NEC has been located not far from these preserves, which are also
intersected by a power line that, when cut to provide access and
maintenance of the lines, also creates the shrub and young forest
habitat needed by the rabbit.
It has been over a year since the
project began as an idea, then a plan, and finally a collaboration.
Many countless hours were spent on the ground to survey and study the
area, to measure and mark boundaries, buffer and protect wetlands,
and to untangle the funding web. We are almost ready to begin the
active phase. In order to create NEC habitat, trees will have to be
cut. A certified harvester will begin in mid-April to create a
shelter-wood cutting. Some trees of high value for wildlife will be
left standing; the rest will be removed and large brush piles will be
created. In just months, stumps will sprout. Sun will reach the
ground, and new shrubs and fruiting plants and berry bushes and brier
vines will begin to take over and thus provide an open invitation to
the rabbits to move into the area and find what they need to
establish a population: food and shelter.
It is not just the rabbits, though,
that we seek to support. The new habitat will support over 47 other
species of birds, mammals, insects, reptiles and amphibians that rely
on the same conditions. Over the next years we, and other scientists,
will visit the site, monitor plant growth, and record wildlife
sightings.
We will continue to post about the
progress of the project and provide photos and updates as we move
forward. “Stay Tuned” for more!
Written by Beth Sullivan.
Find out more about the New England Cottontail Rabbit.
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