Posts Tagged ‘Houston toad’

Bastrop County adopts toad population incentive program

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–In a meeting Tuesday county commissioners approved a grant incentive program to aid private land owners in establishing new populations of the endangered Houston toad or boosting existing breeding groups.

The $25,000 grant program will be funded by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service over the next two years and administered by Bastrop County’s existing Lost Pines Habitat Conservation Program. The 124,000-acre Lost Pines area of the county is home to the largest known population of the small, reclusive amphibians in the US. The Fish and Wildlife Service is responsible for administration of the federal Endangered Species Act.

Roxanne Hernandez, who heads the county habitat conservation program, said some grant funding will be available for land owners who undertake measures to boost current toad populations or create new breeding sites. The county will also be responsible for monitoring the success of the new efforts for up to 10 years, she said.

Previously a similar incentive program was operated under an agreement between the Fish and Wildlife Service and Environmental Defense, a national environmental protection organization.

Bastrop County toad habitat plan gets first easements

Thursday, February 26th, 2009

Bastrop, Tx–At a meeting this week Bastrop County commissioners approved the first two conservation easements as part of a program aimed at protecting the Lost Pines habitat of the endangered Houston toad.

Last year the US Fish and Wildlife Service, the agency charged with administration of the Endangered Species Act, approved the toad protection plan for Bastrop County, known as the Lost Pines Habitat Conservation Plan. Commissioners then named Roxanne Hernandez to manage and administer the plan for the county. Hernandez announced the two conservation easements Monday.

Each easement covers nine acres of separate 10-acre tracts in recognized toad habitat areas. The easement allows the property owners to build a home on one acre and restricts additional development on the remainder of the tracts, said Hernandez.

The easements also should result in the property owners paying property taxes based on the wildlife or agricultural value of the land (not its open market value) because of the altered development potential, she noted.

The easements adjoin each other and lie close to a large protected tract owned by the Captial area Boy Scout Council near Lake Bastrop. The easements “get us closer to a (protected) landscape,” said Hernandez.

The Houston toad, first identified in the Houston area, was soon extripated there and became on of the first species protected under the ESA in the 1970s. Today the Lost Pines of Bastrop County is home to the largest known population of the reclusive amphibians.

Bastrop County (TX) hires toad habitat manager

Sunday, November 23rd, 2008

Bastrop, Tx–Bastrop County has hired Roxanne Hernandez as its first administrator to oversee management of its innovative habitat conservation plan aimed at protecting the endangered Houston toad in the Lost Pines area, mostly east of Bastrop and north of the Colorado River.

Hernandez holds a wildlife management degree and has been working for the Lower Colorado River Authority as a right of way acquisition manager, said Pct. 2 County Commissioner Clara Beckett.

Hernandez was in the news earlier this year when she helped organize a non-profit group to provide volunteer support for the Bastrop County Animal Shelter.

After years of study, debate and research the citizen-driven habitat conservation plan for the Houston toad in Bastrop County was approved by the US Fish and Wildlife Service, the agency charged with enforcing the Endangered Species Act, earlier this year. The county budget for FY 2009 includes funds for plan administration.