DU and Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission to partner on the project.
MEMPHIS, Tennessee – -(AmmoLand.com)- Over the next four years, Ducks Unlimited, in cooperation with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC), will work together to restore wetland structure and function to the MK Ranch in the Apalachicola River Wildlife Environmental Area. The restoration work was made possible thanks to a nearly $22 million grant from the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation’s Gulf Environmental Benefit Fund.
MK Ranch comprises approximately 6,400 acres of historic tidal marsh in the lower Apalachicola River Basin that filters and stores water flowing from upland sites to the tributaries of Lake Wimico and Apalachicola Bay.
“Ducks Unlimited is proud to help restore such an important property in Florida,” said Jamie Rader, Ducks Unlimited director of conservation programs. “The MK Ranch and the Apalachicola River Wildlife Environmental Area are home to a huge assortment of waterfowl, fish and other wildlife. This project will bring new life to the ranch and the surrounding watershed.”
This project will use 1.1 million cubic yards of soil to fill numerous ditches and remove 49.5 miles of banks.
The Gulf Environmental Benefit Fund (GEBF), administered by the National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, supports projects to remedy harm and eliminate or reduce the risk of harm to Gulf Coast natural resources affected by the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill. To learn more about NFWF, go to nfwf.org.
“The use of GEBF funding for legacy conservation like we are doing on the MK Ranch is something our children and grandchildren will appreciate,” said DU CEO Adam Putnam.
“GEBF funding won’t last forever, but the results we achieve