Seasonal Staff Success in Summer 2022

Read Time: 2 min

By Rachel Calderara, Director of Special Projects

Summers are for growth; not just for the local flora, but also for our staff! With 10,000 acres to protect in 52 towns, Wildlands’ stewardship staff have their work cut out for them during the growing season. That’s why each summer we hire a handful of seasonal staff to help us tackle the busiest time of year. Not only do they help keep our trails clear and free of obstructions, but our seasonal staff also engage with volunteers, help lead youth projects, and collaborate with partner organizations. As summer winds down, we’d like to take a moment to appreciate everything our stewardship staff accomplished this season in service to the environment and our communities.  

Three new staff joined us this summer, doubling the size of the stewardship department. Tess Goldmann, who was first introduced to Wildlands Trust as a high school Green Team member in 2017 and 2018, joined Wildlands as a Seasonal Land Steward after earning a dual degree in Biological Science and Computer Science at Smith College. Lucky for us, she’ll be staying on to help with a variety of projects through the end of the year. Tyler Williams was with Wildlands from May to August and has returned to UMass Boston to complete his senior year as an Environmental Science major. Nico Johnston joined us all the way from Texas for a second summer and returned home in August for his senior year of high school.  

The long list of accomplishments that wouldn’t have been possible without Tess, Tyler, and Nico includes: 

  • Constructing two miles of new trails at Halfway Pond Conservation Area. 

  • Installing new roadside signage at Showcase Preserves. 

  • Repairing benches and picnic tables with the Brockton Green Team at D.W. Field Park. 

  • Constructing a half-mile connector trail that links the IHRT loop with the trails at Chapman’s Landing in Hanover. 

  • Installing bog boards at Mark’s Cove Conservation Area with Buzzards Bay Coalition and Wareham Land Trust

Caring for our conservation lands is both challenging and rewarding, and we are grateful to Tess, Tyler, and Nico for their hard work this summer! We hope you find the time to get out on the trails and enjoy the fruits of their labor this fall.  

 

Does this sound like the kind of work YOU would like to be doing? We’re HIRING a full-time Stewardship Coordinator! Learn more here. 

Photo by Rob MacDonald

From the Town of Plymouth: Cyanobacteria Advisory for Halfway Pond

The Town of Plymouth announced a Cyanobacteria Advisory for Halfway Pond on August 25, 2022. The information below details the advisory, provided by the Town of Plymouth.

Cyanobacteria Advisory - Halfway Pond

Updated: 8/25/22

Halfway Pond (Effective: 8/25/2022)

Visual observations provided by the Department of Marine and Environmental Affairs (DMEA) indicate the presence of cyanobacteria (blue-green algae) cells in this pond.  This evidence suggests that the level of cyanobacteria in the water may exceed the MDPH guidelines for recreational waterbodies in Massachusetts.  Accordingly, as recommended by MDPH, a public health advisory is being issued by the Plymouth Public Health Department.  Signage will be posted at public access points, where available to warn individuals against contact with the water (please see attached sign).

People and animals should NOT go in this water until the pond has been tested and cleared of the algal bloom.

What are the health concerns associated with cyanobacteria?

A confirmation of cyanobacteria bloom does not necessarily indicate it is toxic.  Cyanobacteria MAY give off microcystin toxins.  However, all cyanobacteria blooms are treated as potentially toxic to ensure public health.

  • Skin irritation, stomach cramps, vomiting, nausea, diarrhea, fever, sore throat, headache, muscle and joint pain, blisters of the mouth and liver damage.

  • Swimmers in water containing cyanobacterial toxins may suffer allergic reactions, such as asthma, eye irritation, rashes, and blisters around the mouth and nose.

  • Animals, birds, and fish can also be affected by high levels of toxin-producing cyanobacteria.

  • If your animal goes into the water, be sure to rinse them off thoroughly

  • If your animal ingests water and shows signs of illness, contact your veterinarian

Advisories are not lifted until the water has been consistently clear for TWO WEEKS

For more information on cyanobacteria, please click here.

An advisory can not be lifted until the bloom has been visibly clear for two consecutive weeks.

To report a cyanobacteria bloom: Take a photo, document location and send to Plymouth Public Health or Plymouth Marine and Environmental Department

Planning for a Warmer World: Climate Considerations in Wildlands’ Acquisitions and Management Strategies

Read Time: 5 min

By Amy Markarian, Senior Copywriter

Imagine finding out that, sometime in the next 50 years, you will no longer be able to access your own house. You might see the warning signs leading up to its isolation from neighboring lands, but it could just as easily happen overnight, with one unanticipated weather event. You’d probably look to sell pretty quickly and hope to escape the obvious challenges this would create. But when you're a land conservation organization and the “house” expected to become an island is one of your properties, that’s not an option. Wildlands Trust owns land “in perpetuity” -- forever -- and we are responsible for its upkeep, regardless of what that might entail. For this reason, we always need to be thinking ahead...What will this land be like in the future? How will we be able to get to it? Are there ways that we can plan now to ensure that this land will adapt to anticipated changes? 

An analysis of climate mapping tools and projections conducted by former staff member Matt Luongo revealed that this daunting scenario is not farfetched for some of Wildlands’ properties. For example, projections show that migrating saltmarsh could one day completely wash over the only access road that leads to Cushman Preserve, in Duxbury. We have to consider—now—“how will we access and care for this land then?” The same is true for many of our other lands. 

Climate change is a topic that plenty of us would prefer to avoid. It’s seemingly far off and the possibilities are grim. But here at Wildlands, we don’t have the choice to look the other way. We have 300 properties to maintain and a responsibility to prepare for the changes that lie ahead, especially at our coastal properties facing the greatest risks of erosion and water-related problems as global temperatures rise. For this reason, we have conducted a comprehensive climate resilience assessment and created a strategic plan to guide both the management of our existing properties and our future acquisition decisions. 

Matt Luongo and Wildlands’ stewardship team developed the action plan in 2019, integrating climate mitigation and adaptation potential into our land acquisition criteria and stewardship practices. The goals of the plan are to prepare us for future realities that may impact our lands, while also helping us to maximize the benefits of our preserved open spaces as “natural climate solutions” for the region. According to Nature4Climate (N4C), an initiative of the United Nations Development Programme, nearly a third of the Paris Climate Accord’s 2030 goal for cost-effective, global carbon dioxide mitigation can be met with natural climate solutions, which include both land conservation and land management practices that reduce and store carbon emissions.  In addition, natural climate solutions are expected to provide a buffer against extreme weather events and provide ecological refuge for displaced and/or migrating wildlife.* 

Wildlands’ Land Acquisition Criteria 

Properties containing habitats -- including cold-water streams, tidal marshes, and vernal pools, to name a few -- are expected to be most vulnerable to climate change. Therefore, Wildlands’ land acquisition criteria prioritize protection of both habitat-containing lands and adjacent green spaces (which will allow for ecological migration as needed). Identified lands are also prioritized for additional focus in both day-to-day stewardship and future grant applications to support efforts to increase resilience there. Simultaneously, highly resilient lands -- like dunes, barrier beaches, and tidal marshes -- are prioritized for acquisition for their ability to help mitigate the effects of climate change in the short term and/or to buffer against its future effects on Southeastern Massachusetts. 

Wildlands’ strategic plan favors the acquisition of properties that are suitable for long-term adaptation and resilience over those with short-term mitigation potential. However, all conserved land is beneficial in the context of climate change and, with many factors to consider, the adaptation criterion alone is not a reason for Wildlands to acquire or forego a property. 

Land Management Plans 

Vulnerability and resilience assessments were conducted to develop management plans for each of Wildlands’ existing Showcase Preserves and coastal Community Preserves, using data available in 2019. Assessments for each property outlined the landscape context, identified habitats and rare species, evaluated current stewardship tasks and climate vulnerabilities, considered potential public health and environmental justice issues, acknowledged climate resiliencies, and determined any immediate actions needed. Based on this information, each property was assigned two scores (on scales of 1-5), one for its climate vulnerability and the other for its resilience. Various mapping tools, including The Nature Conservancy’s “Resilient Mapping Tool” and Manomet’s “Green Infrastructure Network,” along with data from Resilient MA, the Commonwealth’s Climate Clearinghouse, and FloodIQ, provided quantitative justification for this scoring. 

Using these vulnerability and resilience scores, all of our Showcase Preserves were then graphed to identify the highest priorities for deliberate management strategies, according to the assessment data collected. Properties with a vulnerability score that equaled or exceeded its resilience were determined to be of greatest concern. These included: Cushman Preserve (Duxbury), Shifting Lots Preserve (Plymouth), Hoyt-Hall Preserve (Marshfield), Halfway Pond Conservation Area (Plymouth), Brockton Audubon Preserve (Brockton), Striar Conservancy (Halifax), Willow Brook Farm (Pembroke), and Great Neck Conservation Area (Wareham).  

Wildlands Trust is one of Massachusetts’ oldest and largest regional land trusts, with 50 years of experience and more than 13,000 acres protected. Our organizational priorities include permanently protecting natural landscapes and keeping our communities healthy -- both of which are imperiled by rising temperatures. As such, we recognize our responsibility to take deliberate action to address climate change, and we want our community members to feel confident in our ability and commitment to do so. When we vow to ensure that our lands are protected in perpetuity, we are prepared to honor that commitment through whatever challenges may lie ahead. In relation to climate change, this means that Wildlands Trust is both planning to manage anticipated challenges and proactively working to be a part of possible solutions.

*https://nature4climate.org/about/purpose

Religious Lands Present a Valuable Opportunity for Conservation in Massachusetts

Read Time: 3 min

By Amy Markarian, Senior Copywriter

Throughout Massachusetts’ history, faith-based organizations have amassed substantial property assets in the state. In global terms, according to the University of Notre Dame’s Fitzgerald Institute for Real Estate in 2022, the Catholic Church is the largest non-governmental landowner in the world, with “an estimated 177 million acres” in its worldwide portfolio.* While this staggering statistic is not specific to Massachusetts (and does not take into account the land owned by all other religious entities represented here), it is useful in demonstrating the great potential that exists for the protection of privately-owned religious lands in our region. 

About 20 years ago, Wildlands Trust, working collaboratively with the Massachusetts Religious Lands Conservancy, realized that aging memberships and changing commitments to local religious organizations would someday lead to a significant turnover of lands that these organizations could no longer afford to maintain. Accordingly, we began building relationships with religious entities in our region, with the hope of someday protecting the parcels of land that they owned. Through the years, we discussed visions and plans for these lands with leaders who recognized a moral and spiritual value in protecting the natural environments that had long been a part of their faith communities. These relationships eventually formed the foundation for the permanent protection of several religious properties in Southeastern Massachusetts, earning Wildlands Trust a leadership role in this conservation niche. 

Over the last 15 years, Wildlands Trust’s partnerships with various religious orders have led to the preservation of 6 parcels--in Stoughton, Duxbury, Plainville, Kingston, and Raynham. They range in size from 2 acres to 325 acres, and they are the products of collaborations with several different religious groups, including Catholics, Episcopal Nuns, Thai Buddhists, and others.  

One of Wildlands’ principal partners in this work was Sister Chris Laughlin, a Dominican nun who was instrumental in protecting 37 acres of land in Plainville, owned by the Crystal Springs Center for Spirituality and Ecology. Wildlands’ President and Executive Direct Karen Grey said simply, “Chris was a force—soft-spoken and gracious, but a true force. You could not help but to be inspired when out walking land with Chris.” An 84-year-old nun who walked trails every day, she was a pioneer of the Religious Lands Conservancy, a group established in Massachusetts to protect religious lands. Sister Chris Laughlin died in mid-July 2022, a great loss for all who knew her and for the conservation world. But her death did not come before she was able to ensure the protection of the Crystal Springs Center’s Plainville land, Wildlands’ newest religious land acquisition. With sadness for the loss of a valued friend and partner, we are also eternally grateful for her efforts to build a bridge between religious entities and conservation organizations in Southeastern Massachusetts. 

*https://realestate.nd.edu/research/church-properties

From left: Sister Chris Laughlin, Karen Grey, Scott MacFaden, Sister Barbara Harrington

Green Team 2022: Working Toward a Bright Future for D.W. Field Park

Nine teens out of over sixty applicants were hired for Green Team this summer to complete improvement projects at D.W. Field Park. Green Team emphasizes hands-on learning and community service in an outdoor, team-oriented environment sponsored and led by Wildlands Trust and Manomet.