| The
Adirondacks and Biodiversity

The
Adirondacks - An internationally recognized Biosphere Reserve
Ninety
percent of the wildlife species in the northeastern United States are
found here. Residents of New York and elsewhere, some 90 million
within a day’s drive, can recreate, explore, and marvel at the vast
areas of northern hardwoods and boreal forests, peatlands, the 11,000
lakes and ponds, and 12,000 miles of streams and rivers.
A
Natural Heritage - Why biological diversity is important to our social
fabric
Humans
innately feel an ethical responsibility to all life: we have strong
aesthetic connections to natural environments, we derive direct economic
benefits from biological diversity, and we benefit from the services
provided by healthy and biologically diverse ecosystems. For these
reasons, conservation of biological diversity in the Adirondacks is
becoming increasingly important as issues related to air and water
quality, climate change, land use and development, and invasive species
continue to be threats.
...Pathways
to discovering life
An ATBI
is essential to the long-term conservation and management of the
Adirondacks, and citizens are critical to that outcome. Through an
ATBI an increased connectedness of people to the environment can occur
through citizen science efforts, inspiration from understanding the beauty
of nature, increased public support for protected areas, and the potential
for economically beneficial discoveries.
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