タイトル | Endangered and potentially endangered wildlife on John F. Kennedy Space Center and faunal integrity as a goal for maintaining biological diversity |
本文(外部サイト) | http://hdl.handle.net/2060/19940031915 |
著者(英) | Breininger, David R.; Barkaszi, Mary JO; Smith, Rebecca B.; Provancha, Jane A.; Oddy, Donna M. |
著者所属(英) | NASA Kennedy Space Center |
発行日 | 1994-03-30 |
言語 | eng |
内容記述 | Buffer zones for space operations provide for a wildlife diversity unsurpassed among most federal facilities in the continental U.S. demonstrating the coexistence possible with one of man's greatest technological achievements. This document ranks 119 resident or migratory wildlife species that are endangered or declining. The ranking system herein was based on species' vulnerability to extinction and the relevance of Kennedy Space Center (KSC) for maintaining populations in the U.S. and Florida. One amphibian, 19 reptiles, 80 birds, and 19 mammals were considered endangered or declining. KSC is an integral area for regional species diversity being the focus of the Merritt Island/Cape Canaveral/Turnbull Ecosystem which is part of the Indian River Lagoon watershed, an estuary of national significance. Many species that use this system also use the nearby St. Johns River Basin ecosystem. These two ecosystems are biological corridors between temperate Carolinian and tropical/subtropical Caribbean biotic provinces. Threats to biological diversity on KSC were also reviewed. Traditional environmental assessments, resulting from environmental regulation guidelines, focus on environmental contaminants and habitat lost due to construction. However, this review suggested that small population sizes, isolation of populations, ecosystem and habitat fragmentation, road mortality, and other edge effects may represent more critical threats to biological diversity than the traditional topics. |
NASA分類 | ENVIRONMENT POLLUTION |
レポートNO | 94N36422 NASA-TM-109204 NAS 1.15:109204 |
権利 | No Copyright |
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