Construction starts on world's largest wildlife crossing to let animals roam over 10 lanes of L.A. highway
Los Angeles (CNN)Wild animals in Southern California soon will have more turf to roam thanks to the world's biggest wildlife crossing, which will span 10 lanes of Highway 101 in northwest Los Angeles to close a crucial gap for habitats.
Mountain
lions, which typically wander a territory spanning 150 to 200 miles,
will be among the chief beneficiaries of the new overpass, providing a
safe passage from the Santa Monica Mountains, across the freeway, and
into the Simi Hills of the Santa Susana mountain range. This week, an
18-month-old mountain lion recently separated from its mother and
seeking its own terrain was hit and killed on the 405 freeway, Ana
Cholo, spokesperson for the National Park Service (NPS) tells CNN.
The
$87 million Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Crossing is named for the
president and CEO of the Annenberg Foundation, a family foundation that
supports non-profits. More than 5,000 individual contributions were
made, said Tony Tavares, interim director of CalTrans, the California
Department of Transportation, noting the crossing also will help protect
motorists.
"We
can protect California's ecosystems without jeopardizing the
transportation and other infrastructure development that we need for a
growing population," said US Sen. Alex Padilla at the project's
groundbreaking ceremony Friday.
California
Gov. Gavin Newsom, who was also there, promised $50 million for other
similar projects throughout the state, though they will not be of the
same size and scope. The Annenberg Wildlife Crossing is a partnership of
the National Wildlife Federation and the Santa Monica Mountains
Conservancy, and will be built by CalTrans.
"This
project is truly incredible," said Wade Crowfoot, California secretary
for natural resources. "We will look back decades from now and realize
that this project galvanized a new era of conserving and reconnecting
nature."
Because
pumas demand such a large territory, being relegated to an "urban
island" surrounded by busy freeways has led to inbreeding and lack of
genetic diversity, according to the NPS, which has been studying cougars
in the Los Angeles area for two decades.
"You're
hemmed in to the point where all you can do is date your cousins," Brad
Sherman said of the mountain lions, which thrive when they have a large
territory to hunt and mate. We're "putting the mountain lions back on
Tinder."
"I'm
shocked to hear of a lack of food or sex in Hollywood, but for mountain
lions, it's true," quipped Rep. Adam Schiff, whose district includes
the glitzy region.
P-22,
one of the mountain lions being tracked by the NPS, has gained fame in
the area for roaming through the Hollywood Hills, a bad bout of mange
after being exposed to rat poison, and even mauling a koala at the L.A.
Zoo in Griffith Park. With its own social media accounts, an annual P-22 Day, and branded merchandise, this cat has garnered something of a cult following.
California's
cougars are getting the lion's share of attention for this crossing, as
their enclosure threatens their very existence, the NPS said. But it
also will provide habitat access to coyotes, bobcats, deer, snakes,
lizards, toads and even ants.
"We
can coexist side by side with all kinds of wild instead of paving it
over and choking it off," said philanthropist Wallis Annenberg at the
groundbreaking ceremony. "It is about bringing more attention to an
ingenious solution so urban wildlife and ecosystems like this one cannot
only survive, but thrive."
The
crossing will blend with the surroundings and be covered in soil and
native plants. The Santa Monica Mountains Foundation created a special
plant nursery that will grow all of the fauna to be used in covering the
crossing when it nears completion in 2025.
What a great idea and so wonderful for the wildlife,after all they were there before the road was built.
I like these kind of projects!
The blog song for today is "House of the rising sun" by the Animals
TTFN
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