Hot Springs Corridor
LOWER HOT SPRINGS CONSERVATION
PROPOSAL
by The Cascabel Hermitage Association
The San Pedro River Valley has received international attention as the best
example of a desert riparian system remaining in the Southwest, and in particular
as the principal migratory corridor for neotropical songbirds in the West. Likewise,
Hot Springs Canyon has been recognized for its significance in supporting sub-flow
in the middle San Pedro, which is perennial a short reach downstream from the
confluence of Hot Springs and Paige Canyons. Hot Springs and Paige Canyons have
also begun to be appreciated by wildlife biologists and ecologists for their
significance as a wildlife corridor between the Rincon-Catalina and Winchester-Galiuro
Mountains. Within the central San Pedro River watershed, these rare major canyons
like Hot Springs and Paige provide the only opportunity for connecting "Sky
Island" mountain ranges that includes high elevation forest systems and
diverse tributary canyons. Furthermore, these landscape connections provide
linkage in a more extensive integral landscape that connects mountains, grasslands,
and desert between the Rocky Mountains and the Sierra Madres in Mexico. Ecologist
Dave Gori of The Nature Conservancy notes:
"The property can function
as a corridor (or part of a corridor) in several ways: (1) it can connect higher
elevation habitats in the Rincons, Catalinas, and Galiuros and reduce extinction
rates from these habitats, increase recolonization rates after local extinction,
and permit gene flow between habitats; (2) it can allow an interchange of wildlife
between different habitats (e.g., Sonoran desert to desert grassland to juniper-park
savannah, etc.); (3) it can allow wildlife to migrate seasonally (e.g., elevational
migration in birds, coyotes, bears, desert bighorn); and (4) permit species
to change environments in response to environmental change (e.g., global warming)."
"To date, there have been only a handful of good studies on corridors,
but they clearly show either that corridors increase population viability or
habitat occupancy or that animals use corridors to move between habitat patches
(and often will not move through the non-corridor matrix)."
In recognition of these facts, upper Hot Springs Canyon was protected by The
Nature Conservancy with their purchase of the Muleshoe Ranch. With a slightly
different emphasis, Saguaro-Juniper Corporation and the Cascabel Hermitage Association
have focused much attention on the middle Hot Springs Canyon by placing all
of their holdings under a covenantal deed restriction. Lower Hot Springs has
received some attention by private landholders with conservation easements placed
upon their properties. Further, the recent purchase of the A7 Ranch river properties
along lower Paige Canyon goes a long way in maintaining that corridor.
The present and former Cascabel Ranch Properties which border and cross lower
Hot Springs are the last major pieces of private land in this puzzle. Together
with these others, they could form a mosaic that protects the waters and wildlife
corridors of Hot Springs Canyon from the Rincons and San Pedro River all the
way into the Galiuros.
The ambition of this proposal by the Cascabel Hermitage Association (CHA) to
hold conservation easements in Hot Springs Canyon is to try to complete that
vision. The CHA does not seek to exclude humans from the land, but rather sees
the critical issue to be how people integrate with the land. With current cultural
habits, there are several factors recognized as most critical for integration
with wildlife. Foremost is an unfragmented open landscape with limited human
population density. Of secondary importance are the issues of persistent mechanical
noise makers, free-ranging dogs, continuous night lights, and grid power into
and across the canyon. These restrictions would of course also benefit the quality
of life of the existing human community, as well as the value of their property.
Landowners in Hot Springs Canyon are being very cooperative on most of these issues, and voluntarily wish to maintain the natural values of this place. Conservation easements held by CHA with backup signatory by The Nature Conservancy are being pursued with them. For the parties involved there is a great deal of agreement on all points, except the most difficult and critical issue of signing away right to property subdivision.
The Nature Conservancy and the Cascabel Hermitage Association are anxious to assist in this process. They have both agreed to accept conservation easements in this Hot Springs Canyon corridor area even if there is not agreement on no subdivision. The reason for this is the critical nature of the area and the belief that the other points of agreement are substantial and worthy of implementation.
Funds will be required to record and hold these very important conservation easements, a function that CHA can pursue within its charter and its capacity as a non-profit corporation. However, due to the significant expense and responsibility, the CHA desires that all parties agree to participate. One missing link could break the whole chain. The concern is that the expense and effort would be for naught.
This proposal hopes to accommodate these issues in an acceptable manner for all participants while conserving a major resource of one of our "Last Great Places" - the San Pedro River valley.