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The Crosscut Blog »

May 20, 2008 3:56 PM | last updated May 20, 2008 3:56 PM
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Rare butterflies in a war zone

By Lisa Albers

The land around Ft. Lewis, or just "off post," as those in the military refer to it, has two competing identities. First and foremost, it has been set aside and used for decades as a training ground for war games. Students at neighboring Pierce College can hear the munitions detonations as persistent rumblings in the distance, a poignant, aural reminder of the war overseas.

The land has a second identity that would seem to compete with the first: It's a sanctuary for rare butterflies, birds, and at least one animal. In today's Tacoma News-Tribune, Susan Gordon reports that these species are so rare, they may be eligible for Endangered Species Act protection, and that the Army has not only joined forces with conservationists but has committed a fair amount of its own resources to doing what seems improbable in a simulated war zone: protecting the species.

Gordon writes:

In the middle of the artillery impact area, the Army’s biggest explosives tear up the ground. In the lob-over areas, the no-man’s land on the edges of the target zone, the animals find refuge.

The Army is working in coordination with the state Department of Fish and Wildlife and The Nature Conservancy to set up buffer zone habitats for the creatures. Their efforts are funded in part by federal money allocated in 2004 to preserving lands around Department of Defense installations.

The land itself is short-grass prairie, which may have numbered 150,000 acres in the South Sound at one time but has been reduced to 10 percent of its former size. When the Army isn't training, it's a quiet, windswept spot, more reminiscent to me of Midwestern prairies than the forested, mountainous terrain of Western Washington. On a clear day, Mount Rainier is unmistakably close, glacier details clearly visible, and the Olympic range appears as a purple jagged line in the opposite distance. It's a place where the beauty beckons you, but signs warn not to trespass.

Comments
Sounds of war?
Report a violationPosted by: NWotter on May 20, 2008 5:23 PM
More like sound of bs. Steilacoom and Lakewood aren't anywhere near a Ft. Lewis live fire range.
Smart Idea
Report a violationPosted by: dltooley on May 21, 2008 10:07 AM
Making provisions for environmental protection in a military area is just damn smart. It may well turn out that an area like this may well just turn out to be among the most viable low-elevation habitats anywhere in the US.

Sure, I imagine quite a lot of environmentalists aren't pro-military - but that isn't the subject here. And heck, maybe the relationships built between the smart environmentalists and the smart militarists might just help us avoid some rather STUPID decisions.

Like, for example, the ones we are making now. Both in Washington DC, and locally, including the folks who oppose the Cross-Base Highway as a part of an unrealistic and unviable transportation strategy.
RE: Smart Idea
Report a violationPosted by: lisa_albers on May 21, 2008 10:18 PM
Crosscut Writer"Making provisions for environmental protection in a military area is just damn smart."

I couldn't agree more. There's an enlightened self-interest at work here.

Nature preserves connected to DoD installations present striking juxtapositions that are poetic, ironic. To me this seems uniquely American, one site embodying both war and peace, the impulse to destroy and the impulse to preserve.

Here's another example:
Hanford Reach
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