Combining comfort and conservation is foremost at Bear
Mountain Lodge, The Nature Conservancy’s newest lodging facility near
Silver City, New Mexico, and that commitment extends right down to the
furniture.
Almost all of the lodge’s Mission-style furniture was
made locally out of small-diameter trees that were cut as part of an
ongoing forest restoration project. Santa Clara Woodworks, located not far
from the lodge, built the headboards, armoires, tables and chairs from
Ponderosa pine thinned from the nearby Gila National Forest. The project
was already under way before the 2000 fire season sparked renewed interest
in forest restoration.
The custom-made furniture is part of the Jobs and
Biodiversity Project, a Silver City - based coalition of community and
environmental groups, including the Conservancy, that is developing ways
to restore forests to healthy conditions while encouraging economic
growth. The project is one of 12 national pilot programs funded by the
Ford Foundation to explore turning forest resources into sustainable
livelihoods. Other products of the project include wooden fuel pellets and
custom log cabins.
—Rachel Maurer
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On-site
park guards such as these volunteers in Nicaragua make all the
difference in protecting tropical biodiversity.
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A new study has found that despite all the pressures
facing parks and protected areas in Latin America and the Caribbean, the
most important factor for protecting tropical biodiversity is the simple
presence of on-site park guards. The study, led by Conservation
International, was carried out in 93 protected areas in 22 tropical
countries. It correlated park effectiveness with basic management, "such
as enforcement, boundary demarcation and direct compensation to local
communities, suggesting that even modest increases in funding would
directly increase the ability of parks to protect tropical biodiversity."
Building on these findings, The Nature Conservancy is
working to expand a successful Nicaraguan volunteer forest guard program
into Honduras.
The Conservancy originally developed the program in 1993
at the request of indigenous communities in the Bosawas Reserve, where the
major threat to biodiversity is deforestation stemming from agricultural
colonization. Now there are more than 180 volunteer community members
involved, who take turns patrolling the reserve boundaries, educating
local communities about the reserve’s natural resources and preventing
illegal colonization and logging by outsiders.
The next step is to translate this work to indigenous
communities in neighboring Honduras. These residents of nature reserves
also see their homelands threatened by agricultural colonization and
illegal logging and are open to learning from their neighbors.
—Emily Ross
Cross free-range, grass-fed cattle with an important
conservation landscape, and you get Conservation Beef.
A specialty-beef business partnership between The Nature
Conservancy’s Compatible Ventures Group and the Artemis Wildlife
Foundation for the past two years, Conservation Beef is now moving beyond
mail orders to national distribution, taking the hormone-free beef to
restaurants and grocery stores across the country. Its marketing material
reads "rapturously tender" and "undeniably charismatic," and it seems that
some leading chefs agree: The beef has appeared on the menus of such
well-known restaurants as Santa Fe Grill in Berkeley, Calif., and Savoy
and Verbena in New York City.
Conservation Beef is the brainchild of the Conservancy’s
Bill Weeks and of Brian Kahn, former director of the Montana chapter and
now head of Artemis in Helena, Mont. "It’s an attempt to develop a market
for exceptional beef, properly raised," says Kahn. "Those are values that
the commodity market doesn’t usually recognize."
The business is currently supplied with cattle owned by
private ranchers in the Madison and Big Hole valleys of Montana. Both are
important landscapes in the Conservancy’s conservation blueprint. The
Conservation Beef philosophy is predicated on voluntary conservation
agreements with those landowners and ecological monitoring of their
rangelands. Conservation Beef is on the Web at http://www.conservationbeef.org/.
—Martha Hodgkins Green