Tuesday, May 3, 2005
Pioneer
conservation plan falls short
Promised new habitat for butterflies has not
materialized
Part of a lengthy
special investigation into nationwide Habitat Conservation Plans
By ROBERT McCLURE
SEATTLE POST-INTELLIGENCER REPORTER
SOUTH
SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. -- Under a skeletal roof, Doug Allshouse putters around
flats of viola pedunculata.
(Photo: Environmentalist David Schooley,
with San Francisco in the background, has led efforts to fix problems with the
habitat protection plan at San Bruno Mountain, home to three rare butterfly
species.)
To raise the native
plants in a native climate, the retired grocer and other volunteers removed
every pane of glass from a donated greenhouse.
Viola is critical to
the survival of the callippe silverspot, one of three federally protected
butterflies on nearby San Bruno Mountain, site of the nation's first habitat
conservation plan.
Things aren't going well. A mysterious dormancy
period makes viola tricky to raise.
"I'm waiting for Mother
Nature to tip her hand and show me what to do," Allshouse said.
It's
important work -- the butterflies need more of the plants in order to thrive.
Each spring, male callippes patrol ridgelines looking for love. Afterward,
females head downslope to lay eggs -- and the only plant that will do is
viola.
The hilltops, with their commanding views of San Francisco and
the Pacific Ocean, were given up with great remorse by developers. But the deal
they struck with the government allowed houses to rise atop big fields of viola
at lower levels.
Declared a "model" conservation plan by
Congress when proposed in 1982, San Bruno is in a predicament today that does
not inspire confidence in the national program it spawned.
GILBERT
W. ARIAS / P-I
Development
continues on the north side of San Bruno Mountain.
The plan here has fallen
short. Twenty-three years into its 30-year term, not only has it failed to
create the amount of butterfly habitat that was promised, but management of
protected lands is being done on the cheap.
The plan's managers say it
is a success because the butterflies are still around and their numbers appear
to be stable. But a 2004 study by UCLA called the methods used to count
butterflies for the plan's first 18 years "haphazard" and labeled the
results "spurious."
Money has been set aside to manage the
mountain's preserved lands, but it is not enough to fight the waves of invasive
weeds crowding out native plants favored by the trio of butterflies: the
callippe, the San Bruno elfin and the mission blue.
The San Bruno
predicament illustrates how habitat plans, which grant decades-long licenses to
kill and harm endangered species, can be difficult to maintain because of
unanticipated changes -- both biological and financial.
Despite the
challenges, the mountain's allure hasn't faded for Allshouse, who is president
of Friends of San Bruno Mountain. "The mountain is magical, and if you let
it, it gets you hooked," he said. "It's almost like a spiritual
entity."
Officially, the job of taking care of the mountain falls
to Patrick Kobernus of Thomas Reid Associates, the environmental consulting
firm that hatched the habitat plan and is responsible for making it work.
But
Kobernus said he is forced to perform "triage" as dozens of invasive
weeds take root -- some of them likely introduced by homeowners in developments
bearing street names such as Callippe Court and Silverspot Drive.
"There's
been a general lack of understanding of how difficult it is to manage invasive
weeds," he said. "Once you set aside land, that's one thing -- but
managing it, we're learning, is a much different thing."
The
biggest problem is a lack of money. Homeowners pay $37 a year to help the
butterflies. That generates about $140,000, but that is nowhere near enough to
keep weeds in check on a 5-square-mile mountain.
For all its
drawbacks, the San Bruno plan is better than many being approved today. About
90 percent of the mountain's butterfly habitat was preserved in the original
deal. Many modern habitat conservation deals allow an acre to be developed for
every acre saved, an analysis of the plans shows.
Another difference:
This plan didn't come with a now-common "no surprises" clause, which
promises developers that they will never have to pay any more money or give up
any more land -- even if the population of the species in question plummets.
The
plan has fallen short of its promise to replace at least a quarter of the
butterfly habitat lost to development. The latest progress report lists 46
acres restored for the butterflies, while houses occupy more than 300
acres.
Environmentalists scoff at the restoration done. "They
haven't done (a thing) out there," Allshouse said.
Because this
plan must be amended -- the callippe butterfly won protection in 1997, and
wasn't covered by the original plan -- Kobernus' firm and San Mateo County
officials have a chance to fix some of the shortcomings.
More
trade-offs, however, may be in the works. A developer who wants to build houses
in existing butterfly habitat has proposed boosting the butterfly-protection
assessment to $800 for each new house. If allowed, that would triple the total
collected under the plan to about $420,000 a year, officials say.
Allshouse
and other conservationists are wary. Habitat conservation plans "sound
kind of warm and fuzzy," Allshouse said. "What you end up finding out
is that (they) don't end up benefiting the endangered species at all. They just
allow people to destroy their habitat."