First National Wildlife Refuge Created (1903)

On March 14, 1903, President Theodore Roosevelt created the nation’s first federal wildlife refuge by signing an executive order designating the Pelican Island, Florida, Bird Preservation Area.  During his presidency, Roosevelt created more than 50 such reserves, the forerunners of the National Wildlife Refuge System that today includes more than 550 protected areas covering 150 million acres.

Pelican Island National Wildlife Refuge; this is the original island, showing oyster reefs added to protect the island from erosion (photo by George Gentry, USFWS)

Pelican Island is a small mangrove island in the Indian River waterway of east-central Florida, about 50 miles south of Cape Canaveral.  Although only 5.5 acres when designated as a reserve, the island had long captured the attention of bird watchers—and bird hunters.  Early visitors noted that the trees seemed covered with snow, which was really the profusion of downy chicks of pelicans and other birds and the white plumage of egrets and spoonbills.

Fashion during the Victorian age often featured extravagant use of feathers (photo by Wilhelm Forster, 1893)

Victorian fashions emphasized feathers and other bird parts for hats, broaches, and other decorations.  Because birds had no protection at the time, hunters slaughtered waterfowl in great numbers as the birds gathered for nesting or roosting.  Bird numbers were dropping across the southeast, including a noted drop among the species at Pelican Island.  Outrage over this wasteful harvest led to several laws protecting migratory waterfowl in the early decades of the 20th Century.

But those laws still needed to be enforced, and the federal government was not inclined to pay.  Consequently, the Florida Audubon Society gained permission from the government to employ game wardens to enforce the laws at Pelican Island and elsewhere.  It was dangerous work, however, and two early wardens were murdered while on the job.

That changed when Paul Kroegel took the job.  Kroegel, a German immigrant and local boat builder and pilot, was devoted to the island and its birds.  He came prepared to enforce the laws, armed and ready to do what was needed.  He remained on the job for more than 20 years, creating an atmosphere that favored conservation over exploitation.

Showy plumage, as shown on this breeding Snowy Egret from California, made these birds targets of commercial hunters (photo by Len Blumin)

Pelican Island was a good place for conservation.  Sources suggest that it has the most diverse bird fauna in the United States and that it lies within one of the world’s biodiversity hotspots in the Indian River waterway.  The island itself began to shrink due to both natural forces and excessive wave action by passing boats, and by 2000 was only half its original size.  A massive effort to surround the island with an oyster-shell reef and to plant both seagrass and mangroves has been successful in reversing the loss of area.

A river otter at Pelican Island National Wildlife Refuge (photo by Keenan Adams, USFWS Southeast Region)

The Pelican Island National Wildlife Refuge has also grown from the original island.  It now encompasses more than 4000 acres of similarly important mangrove islands and other wetlands.  The area is also designated as wilderness and as a National Historic Landmark because of its significance as the first federal wildlife preserve.

References:

The Conservation Fund.  Pelican Island National Wildlife Refuge.  Available at:  http://www.conservationfund.org/projects/pelican-island-national-wildlife-refuge.  Accessed March 13, 2017.

Indian River County Main Library.  Pelican Island National Wildlife Refuge.  Available at:  http://www.irclibrary.org/pdf/pelicanislandrefuge.pdf.  Accessed March 13, 2017.

Pelican Island Preservation Society.  The Refuge.  Available at:  http://www.firstrefuge.org/the-refuge/.  Accessed March 13, 2017.

Reffalt, William.  2003.  Pelican Island.  USFWS informal document.  Available at:  https://www.fws.gov/refuges/centennial/pdf2/pelicanIsland_reffalt.pdf.  Accessed March 13, 2017.

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.  History of Pelican Island.  Available at:  https://www.fws.gov/refuge/pelican_island/about/history.html.  Accessed March 13, 2017.

This Month in Conservation

November 1
Ansel Adams Shoots “Moonrise” (1941)
November 2
National Bison Day
November 3
William Cullen Bryant Born (1794)
November 3
Rosalie Edge, Conservationist and Suffragette, born (1877)
November 4
UNESCO Created (1946)
November 5
Ethelwynn Trewavas Born (1900)
November 6
International Day to Protect the Environment during War
November 7
Costa Rica Constitution Enacted (1949)
November 8
World Town Planning Day
November 9
First Live Panda Leaves China (1936)
November 10
Guinness Book of World Records Born (1951)
November 11
Leonardo DiCaprio Born (1974)
November 12
Salim Ali Born (1896)
November 13
Amory Lovins Born (1947)
November 14
US Crushes Elephant Ivory (2013)
November 15
America Recycles Day
November 16
Global Climate Change Research Act Passed (1990)
November 17
David Livingstone Arrives at Victoria Falls (1855)
November 18
Asa Gray, Father of American Botany, Born (1810)
November 19
World Toilet Day
November 20
John Merle Coulter, Pioneering Botanist, Born (1851)
November 21
Lava Beds National Monument Created (1925)
November 22
Grofe’s “Grand Canyon Suite” Premiered (1931)
November 23
National Eat-A-Cranberry Day
November 24
“On the Origin of Species” Published (1859)
November 25
Nikolai Vavilov, Pioneering Russian Agronomist, Born (1887)
November 26
Anna Maurizio, Swiss Bee Expert, Born (1900)
November 27
Bill Nye, the Science Guy, Born (1955)
November 28
Elsie Quarterman, Plant Ecologist, Born (1910)
November 29
U.S. Rations Coffee (1942)
November 30
Mark Twain, American Humorist, Born (1835)
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