| Altar Valley Conservation Alliance |
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| Written by Brendan Smith, updated by Carol Daly | |
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"We've all worked on common projects of conservation. We got to a point where we were not moving forward in our own places. We decided if we all worked together, we might be able to get people to hear us more than working on an individual basis," says Altar Valley Conservation Alliance co-president Pat King, who owns King's Anvil Ranch with her husband John.
![]() Photo courtesy of the Arizona State Lands Department Objective: The Altar Valley Conservation Alliance (AVCA) works on habitat restoration and conservation in the Altar Valley, including preservation of family ranching against development pressures, erosion control along the Altar Wash, the return of natural fire and prescribed burns, and protection of native species, including six that are threatened or endangered. Participants: Local ranching families, Arizona State Land Department, Arizona Game and Fish Department, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service(USFWS), U.S. Natural Resource Conservation Service (NRCS), Pima County, Pima Natural Resource Conservation District, The Nature Conservancy, Malpai Borderlands Group, Sonoran Institute, Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge, Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum, U.S. Bureau of Land Management, Arizona Water Protection Fund, Southeast Arizona Land Trust, hunting groups, hikers, and other individual volunteers who care about the area's ecological values and natural amenities. History: The Sonoran Desert's history extends back 40 million years to when intense volcanic and tectonic activity produced the region's characteristic basin and range topography. The desert covers approximately 120,000 square miles in southern Arizona and California, as well as most of the Mexican states of Sonora and Baja California. According to the National Park Service, the Sonoran Desert is thought to have the greatest species diversity of any desert in North America. ![]() Cactus ferruginous pygmy-owl, photo courtesy of the USFWS
Pima County's Sonoran Desert Conservation Plan seeks to preserve ranches as key partners in habitat conservation. The county has purchased some lands, but the plan says, "Purchasing ranch lands should be the last option for conservation explored. Ranchers should remain on the land to continue ecosomic activity and ranch land management using the best grazing practices. Priority methods of ranch conservation should use purchase of development rights and conservation easements as the most desired method of actual long term conservation." Altar Valley is identified in the plan as a Priority Ranch Conservation Resource, as well as Priority Habitat and Corridor for native species, including the endangered cactus ferruginous pygmy-owl, Pima pineapple cactus, and Chiricahua leopard frog. ![]() New erosion control dike on the Palo Alto Ranch, photo by Daniel Robinett
Credits can be purchased by landowners, municipalities, or developers "to offset the effects of their projects at ratios to be established by the Service based on the lost habitat's value to the species' survival," say the USFWS. "The cost of each conservation credit is determined by the owner of the bank." AVCA does not manage the land in the bank nor sell the credits. Rather, an AVCA committee manages the money that is set aside by the Humphreys from their sale of the credits to fund the on-the-ground cost of conserving the endangered cactus. AVCA reports regularly to the USFWS and the landowners on the status of the fund and whether the landowners are in compliance with the requirements the USFWS set for the conservation bank. In 2003, with the help of a $250,000 grant from the EPA, the Palo Alto Ranch replaced dilapidated 1950-era erosion-control dikes in the Altar Wash
In September 2004, Dale Hall, then director of the Southwest Region for the USFWS, testified before Congress on national forest management and the Endangered Species Act. In comments on collaboration with local groups, Hall stated, "Private efforts like those of the Malpai Borderlands Group and the Altar Valley Conservation Alliance in southern Arizona demonstrate what private landowners can do when they are given a chance and are respected as the land stewards they truly are." AVCA has continued efforts to control erosion on the side channels of the main Brawley Wash. In 2006, two erosion control workshops were sponsored for local ranchers and included demonstrations of actual installation of several types of "road dikes" along roads on some Valley ranches. From its inception, AVCA has worked to bring natural fire back into the landscape, where government policy has been to extinguish lightning-started fires immediately rather than letting them burn. "Fire certainly has a role to play here," says King. AVCA's initial plan pinpointed natural boundaries and roads that firefighters could use as fire breaks while allowing fires to burn. That plan wasn't enacted because of endangered-species concerns, but AVCA persevered, working in cooperation with the Arizona State Land Department, Arizona Game and Fish Commission, Arizona Ecological Service Office, NRCS, USFWS, Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge, Pima County Natural Resources Parks and Recreation, and The Nature Conservancy. The Altar Valley Fire Management Plan (AVFMP) was completed in July 2007, and the draft Environmental Analysis was put out by NRCS for public comment in October. The plan covers roughly 609,900 acres in Pima County and is intended to "improve range and watershed health by reducing invasive and woody species in the Altar Valley Watershed grassland habitats. It would allow natural fire and carefully controlled prescribed burns while also addressing endangered species concerns." Challenges/constraints: Dealing with the day-to-day work of an active organization has been a challenge for the all-volunteer AVCA. As with many such groups, volunteer attrition can be a problem, with the bulk of the work often falling on a few members. Membership in the organization is open, and AVCA is trying to expand its base. Currently, the majority of the members are ranchers in the watershed. "Just this past year we kind of did a number of meetings in which we worked to try to re-focus and allow the different members to pick an area that they really are interested in and would be interested in participating in, so that the load spreads itself out again," says King. "We were able to kind of shift the responsibilities to some of the other members... We're hoping with the re-shuffling, we might get some people outside our little circle to pick an area they might be interested in and become part of the group as well." AVCA's 11-member board of directors votes on proposed actions, with a simple majority required for passage. "There are times when there are tensions, but if we can keep our focus on the issue, we can work together to work on that in spite of our tension. That's what we try to keep before us so that we can remain active in what we want to get accomplished," explains King. Not all volunteers are AVCA members. "For our fire plan, for the survey for archaeological materials, for our cactus program, people have come and helped us and done various volunteer things. Hunters and other people who come out and hike and picnic and just enjoy this valley will come back and participate," says King. Fundraising is always a challenge. Member ranchers have reached into their own pockets to fund some projects, while other conservation projects haven't been started because of the prohibitive cost. "It's not about a financial reward because there is none," King says. "You don't get paid back for what you put into it because there's not that kind of money in agriculture." AVCA does not have paid staff or a web site (although it publishes a semiannual newsletter, The Rainmaker) but in 2007 the group secured an NRCS Technical Service Provider grant. One service provider works with AVCA on restoration projects, and also does grant writing. Another is a specialist in one-rock dams used to stabilize arroyos. In April 2008 he will meet with a group of people from about 11 ranches to look at potential dam sites, showing the ranchers what sites would be suitable and explaining why. In October he plans to return and do demonstration installations on two of the ranches.
AVCA has been frustrated at times by the intensive regulations associated with endangered species and the misperception by some environmentalists and government employees that the ranchers aren't truly committed to habitat conservation. "We're trying to do improvements and yet we're being treated as if the work we are doing is detrimental to the land and even the species, and yet our species (in the Altar Valley) are thriving," King says. "Everybody is running from a lawsuit. We're going up against people who have been here for a year and a half and they're the experts, and we're these ignorant, manure-kicking illiterates." For more information see: Sonoran Desert Conservation Plan Altar Valley Fire Management Plan, 2007 Draft EA Alter Valley Fire Management Plan, NRCS, 2007
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