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Contact: Sally
Morehead-Applebaum, UTMSI
sallym@utmsi.utexas.edu
361-749-6771
Lee Clippard, UT-Austin
lclippard@mail.utexas.edu
512-232-0675
George Cathcart, NOAA
301-713-3155 ext. 141
301-538-9247 (cellular)
Date: May 2, 2006
Estuarine research reserve
to be designated in Port Aransas, Texas
AUSTIN, Texas-A 185,708-acre area of marshes, mangroves, open water and
coastal prairie along the Texas Gulf coast will become a National Estuarine
Research Reserve in a May 6 designation ceremony at The University of Texas
at Austin Marine Science Institute (UTMSI) in Port Aransas, Texas.
Federal, state and local officials will welcome the Mission-Aransas National
Estuarine Research Reserve (NERR) as the 27th member of the National Oceanic
and Atmospheric Administration's (NOAA) reserve system with a keynote
address from Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison.
"Estuarine Reserves are living laboratories," said William Powers, president
of The University of Texas at Austin. "The University of Texas is proud to
add its considerable expertise to the important work of the National
Estuarine Research Reserve System."
The new reserve, which will be managed by UTMSI in partnership with NOAA, is
in Aransas and Refugio counties about 30 miles northeast of Corpus Christi
on the Texas coast.
"As the first reserve in the western Gulf of Mexico, Mission-Aransas adds
significant value to the National Estuarine Research Reserve System and
broadens the opportunities to study, understand and manage America's coastal
ecosystems," said retired Navy Vice Admiral Conrad C. Lautenbacher Jr., Ph.D,
under secretary of commerce for oceans and atmosphere and NOAA
administrator.
The reserve will attract scientists and students from across the nation to
study at the site, including up to two national graduate research fellows
funded annually by NOAA. NERR designation ensures access to federal funding
for research and education programs, environmental monitoring and
science-based training programs for coastal managers and decision-makers.
"The western Gulf of Mexico has a number of unique features, including
coastal prairies, oak savannahs, and extensive seagrass and black mangrove
communities that will help broaden the understanding of estuarine ecosystems
nationwide," said Paul Montagna, Mission-Aransas reserve manager and
professor of marine science at UTMSI. "Research and monitoring here will
help coastal decision makers manage these vital resources on a foundation of
sound science, and it will help to educate the next generation of marine
scientists and decision makers. This is good for Texas and good for the
nation."
Official designation of the Mission-Aransas NERR culminates a four-year
process from site selection through the environmental impact study and the
development of a comprehensive management plan. The Mission-Aransas site was
proposed by Texas Governor Rick Perry in March 2004 after a two-year site
selection process.
NOAA's reserve system includes 27 estuarine locations in 21 states and
Puerto Rico that are protected for research, education, outreach and
stewardship. Mission-Aransas will be the third largest reserve in the system
and includes the wetland, upland and marine environments typically found in
the western Gulf of Mexico.
NOAA's National Estuarine Research Reserve System is part of the National
Ocean Service.
Editors's note: Video footage and high-resolution images of the
Mission-Aransas reserve are available for the media. To obtain a copy,
please contact Lee Clippard at 512-232-0675 or lclippard@mail.utexas.edu.
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