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highway
287/26: linkage zone analysis & highway mitigation |
Clifford
Nietvelt and Timm Kaminski |
| U.S.
Highway 287/26 between Moran Junction and Dubois, Wyoming, passes
through Bridger-Teton and Shoshone National Forests in an area that,
because it links the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem to the Canada Rockies,
has international significance for wildlife. This area, which has
been identified as critical habitat by the Yellowstone to Yukon Conservation
Initiative, has been recommended for 37 miles of highway improvements.
Because improvements are likely to have environmental impacts, we
are endeavoring to: |
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Jackson
Hole Conservation Alliance field trip to Togwotee Pass. |
- Identify
problem areas and develop mitigation solutions.
Our goal
is to analyze and assess the potential impacts on wildlife of
this road improvement project. We will identify potential problem
areas and existing opportunities for wildlife movements along
the highway corridor and development highway design criteria or
mitigation solutions to address the problems and maintain or improve
opportunities for movement.
- Identify
features that facilitate animal movements.
Our project
will begin by conducting a literature review, identifying
landscape and vegetation features that facilitate movement
of carnivores, ungulates, and amphibians, and evaluating the impacts
of the present highway on wildlife. Our linkage zone analysis
will identify, on both a broad scale and a site-specific
scale, sites where crossings occur and possibly crossing structures
might best be built.
- Evaluate
design criteria to reduce impacts to wildlife.
We will
also identify, evaluate, and implement design criteria and mitigation
measures to reduce impacts to wildlife. Road kills, snow tracking,
traffic surveillance, and passive mitigation experiments will
give us additional data. Finally, we will continue post-construction
monitoring.
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