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TITLE:
The Exxon Valdez Oil Spill: Habitat Protection as a Restoration Strategy
AUTHOR(S):
Catherine Berg
Art Weiner
Tom Gerlach
Jesse Grunblatt
Ken Holbrook
Mark Kuwada

VOLUME:
5
ISSUE:
1
PAGES:
44 - 55
PUBLICATION DATE:
June 28, 2008

ABSTRACT:
Habitat protection is a major component of the Exxon Valdez oil spill restoration process. The acquisition of private lands, or partial interests in private lands, is intended to promote natural recovery of spill-injured resources and services by removing the threat of additional development impacts. The Comprehensive Habitat Protection Process is the method that was designed to achieve this objective. Over one million acres within the oil spill affected area were evaluated, scored, and ranked by a multi-criteria evaluation process. Initially, lands were divided into large parcels encompassing entire bays and watersheds. Criteria were then used to assess the habitat and human-use values associated with each parcel and the protection benefit that acquisition would provide for 19 injured resources and services. This process has been the basis for the acquisition of 41,549 acres of land on Afognak Island and 23,800 acres on the Kenai Peninsula and for agreements that, if consummated, will result in the acquisition of fee or lesser rights on over a half million acres of land in the Kodiak Archipelago, on the Kenai Peninsula, and in Prince William Sound. All of these lands or rights, if acquired, will be incorporated into parks or refuges or otherwise managed in a manner that will facilitate the recovery of the resources and services injured by the oil spill.

PUBLICATION:
Restoration Ecology
PUBLISHED BY:
Society for Ecological Restoration International
 
DOCUMENT LINK:
http://www3.interscience.wiley.com/journal/119159791/abstract
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Last Updated: November 9, 2009