Overall Rating | Silver - expired |
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Overall Score | 52.27 |
Liaison | Tracy Edwards |
Submission Date | May 16, 2013 |
Executive Letter | Download |
Frostburg State University
OP-T2-20: Wildlife Habitat
Status | Score | Responsible Party |
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0.25 / 0.25 |
Daniel
Fiscus Sustainability Liaison College of Liberal Arts and Sciences |
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indicates that no data was submitted for this field
None
Does the institution have programs in place to protect and/or create wildlife habitat on institution-owned land?:
Yes
None
A brief description of the wildlife habitat program, policy, or practice:
FSU owns and maintains a 10 acre Arboretum that provides wildlife habitat for 45 species of birds, a state rare species of salamander (Jefferson salamander) and many other species of animals and plants. The Arboretum includes a variety of unique habitats that supports a diversity of species, including a wetland, a section of Sandspring Run, an open field area and a forest. The Arboretum is actively maintained by collaboration between the Arboretum Committee, the FSU Facilities staff, and many volunteer students and community members. We conduct multiple work days each semester during which 40-80 people regularly turn out to help remove exotic invasive plant species, plant and tend native tree and plant species and do many other activities to maintain this 10 acre natural area as quality wildlife habitat. The Arboretum is used by faculty and students in many FSU courses for outdoor field labs and experiences in Biology, Geography and other departments.
FSU also owns another patch of forest that is approximately 30 acres in size and is located near the Edgewood Commons student residential building. This forest is not currently protected or specially designated, but I have asked the FSU Administration to consider this. This area has been known to provide habitat for a rare shrew species and it has many unique features including large mature trees, high diversity of tree and herbaceous species, and large boulders. This area is also used for education and research by faculty in Biology and other departments. If this area could be preserved for continued education, research and conservation it would greatly increase the amount and quality of wildlife habitat owned and maintained by FSU.
The University has over 130 acres of forest that also contain 3 acres of wetlands, a pond, and creek. The arboretum off limits to any development. The forest areas have every type of native wildlife present. The wetlands and a pond have migrating water fowl. The university leaves these areas relatively untouched, which in turn promotes wildlife. There are several naturalized grass areas on campus that are home to wildlife. The campus property has white-tailed deer, gray squirrel, ground hogs, chipmunks, ducks, skunk, and raccoon. If wildlife encroaches too close to campus, such as sunk or raccoon, the university utilizes live trapping in most cases to remove and relocate the wildlife as a safety precaution.
None
The website URL where information about the program, policy, or practice is available:
Data source(s) and notes about the submission:
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