| NEW
YORK METROPOLITAN REGION - Conserving Natural Areas at Home
The aim of the Metropolitan
Biodiversity Program of the Center for Biodiversity and Conservation (CBC)
is to enhance understanding of local and regional biodiversity and apply
this knowledge to conservation. To accomplish this, the Program integrates
information from the American Museum of Natural History's scientific departments
and regional collections directly into conservation-related research,
education, planning, and management initiatives in the New York region.
Since its inception, the Metro Program has also promoted local research
and education projects to highlight the importance of invertebrates in
conservation.
Program Highlights
In
1999, the CBC's Metro Program, in concert with its partners – the
New York State Museum's Biodiversity Research Institute, the New York
Natural Heritage Program, the New York State Department of Environmental
Conservation and The Nature Conservancy – launched the New York
State Biodiversity Project (NYSBP). The NYSBP works to improve our understanding
of the state's biodiversity and to identify both challenges and solutions
to protecting that biodiversity. A needs assessment, carried out by the
Environmental Law Institute for the Project in 2000, identified gaps in
existing knowledge, flagged conservation threats, and helped lay the foundation
for future conservation actions within the state. This assessment has
since served as a model for similar programs at the national level. In
2002, the NYSBP established a central website (http://www.nybiodiversity.org/),
with links to information on New York's biodiversity; and also completed
an information dissemination plan to ensure that target audiences are
able to assess, understand, and use the project's resources. The website
is an important information clearinghouse on biodiversity for New York's
citizens, lawmakers, and conservation practitioners. 
Metro Program Manager Liz Johnson
steered the development and production of the 2000 CBC Spring Symposium,
Nature
in Fragments: The Legacy of Urban Sprawl, cosponsored by the Wildlife
Conservation Society's Metropolitan Conservation Alliance. The conference
examined the phenomenon of unplanned development (“sprawl”),
and its serious impact on biodiversity. An edited volume, based in part
on the symposium proceedings, will be published by Columbia University
Press in early 2005. Contributions by experts in planning, ecology, economics,
and the social sciences have been included to reach a target audience
of land use planners and conservation biologists.
Recognizing the enormous instructional
value of the Museum's extensive invertebrate collections, the CBC began
organizing annual identification workshops in collaboration with the Division
of
Invertebrate Zoology in 1998. Attendees have included biologists, naturalists,
land managers, consultants, teachers, and others responsible (directly
and indirectly) for the conservation and management of much of the New
York region's biodiversity. These two- and three-day workshops enable
participants to hone their taxonomicidentification skills in both the
laboratory and the field, and to better understand the ecology and conservation
requirements for the taxa being studied. Workshops to date have focused
on butterflies and moths, dragonflies and damselflies, freshwater mussels
and snails, and bees. A Web-based identification guide to local freshwater
mussels has been developed based on the 2000 taxonomic workshop, with
species checklists, images, and information (available at http://cbc.amnh.org/mussel/).
Keys and resources about other invertebrate taxa are also available.
In
conjunction with these ongoing educational activities, the CBC published
Life in the Leaf Litter, a guide to the
diversity of soil organisms and the crucial role that invertebrates play
in woodland ecosystems. The booklet was based, in part, on a leaf litter
survey conducted by the CBC's Metro Program and the Museum's Division
of Invertebrate Zoology in Central Park's woodlands, which led to the
discovery of a new genus and species of centipede,Nannarrup hoffmani.
In celebration of Central Park's
150th anniversary, the CBC Metro Program helped organize the Central Park
BioBlitz, a twenty-four-hour inventory of the biodiversity of the park
on June 27-28, 2003. CBC and Museum staff worked throughout the event
as expert identifiers. Over 864 species were identified, including two
species of tardigrades, a microscopic invertebrate phylum. The event was
organized in partnership with the Explorer's Club and seven other New
York-based groups.
Next Steps
Together
with its NYSBP partners, the Metropolitan Biodiversity Program will publish
a book summarizing what is currently known about the biodiversity of New
York State; its natural heritage, critical threats to its biodiversity,
and recommendations for future research and conservation (to be released
in 2004).
Building
on interest generated by the Nature in Fragments
symposium, the Metro Program is developing a series of educational materials,
including guides for municipal planners and teachers on combating the
effects of sprawl.

The
Metro Program will further develop collections-based resources, including,
the Metro 100 Series: computer-based, color-photo identification guides
to the New York region's 100 most commonly seen species, from selected
invertebrate groups, beginning with moths.
With
other conservation partners in the New York region, the Metro Program
is also seeking to develop new collaborative restoration and management
projects with a focus on invertebrate conservation.
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