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KIAWAH ISLAND -- If bobcats can thrive in this landscaped golf resort, maybe
the entire developing Southeast coast can hold onto its eye-catching beauty.
That's what Jim Chitwood is thinking. That's why he's driving a second round
of research by the Kiawah Conservancy, such as collaring a few more of the
island's 35 or so bobcats with GPS tracking devices. He wants to know where
they rest during the day, where they like to hunt at night, where they den
and mate.
Bobcats and their habitat are key to conserving coastal wildlife.
Bobcats are one of those alpha creatures that signal a good, healthy
ecosystem: If they can co-exist with development, this is a place where
animals and plants of all kinds can thrive. Two of the cats collared
recently already have been killed by cars while crossing streets. The more
researchers can learn about the cats, the more the conservancy will be able
to tell property owners about how to safeguard them.
It is becoming tougher for wildlife to thrive as Kiawah builds out.
Homes are starting to crowd the natural environs that are its allure. The
resort is about half developed now. Sooner or later, most of the high ground
will be built upon. Marginal, "natural" areas -- such as the wildlife-rich
expanse of dunes on the island's west end spit toward Capt. Sam's Inlet --
are being eyed for construction.
Meanwhile, the Freshfields Village market area just off the island is
becoming a shopping mecca. Behind it, Bohicket Road is developing as a
market area. This place could become another Hilton Head, one more
gardenlike barrier island gradually overrun and turned into a city.
"We're a developed island, and we're getting that very specific information
from the research to help us maintain it as a habitat," Chitwood said. The
techniques they learn "can help coastal communities all the way to Florida."
And they already are. The phone rings daily at the conservancy or town's
wildlife biology office as other researchers look for keys to preserving
natural landscaping and wildlife corridors.
Sure, you're thinking, swanky Kiawah as a model for preserving the coastal
barrier islands? But what's going on here deserves a closer look.
Why Kiawah?
Chitwood isn't your ordinary environmentalist. He has that shoulder-shrug
modesty of a research guy, and he wears it like a lab coat over the quiet
command of a corporate exec. He's a retired physical organic chemistry
researcher who spent most of his career at Eastman Kodak, the imaging
company.
He wasn't looking to retire to a cabin in the wilderness. He was looking to
retire to Hilton Head, until he couldn't stand what was happening there
anymore.
On Kiawah he saw a chance to help do it right. He joined the conservancy and
was asked to take a role in its research, a mix-and-match set of projects
tracking bobcats, banding birds and taking inventory of other wildlife such
as minks. He immediately asked one of those commanding questions: What can
you do with it?
Knowing what to do with it, as it turned out, is Chitwood's strength.
"To me it was an 'Aha!' moment," said Donna Windham, conservancy director.
"The question in my mind has always been, why do we care? What can it tell
us? That's just in my DNA," Chitwood said. He brought in academic and
environmental agency partners. He pored over the research already compiled
and began connecting the dots. The bobcats, particularly fascinated him.
If you go
What: Kiawah Conservancy's 'An Evening with Rudy Mancke.'
Cocktails-and-dinner fundraiser for the Dr. Jim Chitwood Science Fellowship
Program to pay for ongoing wildlife research.
When: 6 p.m. Oct. 29.
Where: The Sandcastle, Kiawah Island.
Cost: $75 per person. Limited seating, reservations required.
Register or more information: Go to
www.kiawahconservancy.org, click on 'Events.' Call 768-2029,
or email Jennifer
wody@kiawahconservancy.org.
On the web
To track bobcat movements on Kiawah Island, go to
www.wildlifeatkiawah.com
The island seems to hold a relatively stable population of the wild cats,
and the dominant males have staked out five distinct territories. Younger
males tend to get pushed off the island: They have been found as far away as
Green Pond in Colleton County. The clincher is that the habitats preferred
by the remaining bobcats tend to be important habitats for other species as
well -- wetland fringes, secondary dunes and the like.
The bobcat study led to the conservation of more than 20 acres of that
habitat. But that's not going to be enough. The conservancy also has been
working with property owners on natural landscaping. That, Chitwood saw,
might be the key.
"Landscape has to play a key role, and part of the question was, can it?"
Chitwood said. The idea is, if enough property owners can be persuaded to
maintain enough natural landscaping, it would give the bobcats the passages
they would need -- habitat for them and any number of other critters,
including 83 species of nesting and migratory birds, such as bluebirds and
painted buntings.
"Get it simple enough, focused enough and it's doable," Chitwood said. "It's
the great island beauty that brings property owners and guests. If we can
get that air time (with owners) we can have them onboard, because they want
it."
End game
It seems to be doable. The conservancy, so far, has persuaded owners to keep
a total of 15 more bobcat-habitat acres natural. That's not much on an
island of more than 7,000 acres. But it's a start.
As landscaping replaces environs, the satellite tracking will tell the
conservancy how the bobcats react. Tracking the populations of other
species, particularly birds, will help gauge the changes too.
So, the conservancy is moving from its first stage -- working to keep
natural areas -- into its second, "developed" stage, teaching people how to
respond as species react to changes. The "end game" now is adapting a
developed island to maintain a workable ecosystem, with people as the
game-changers.
"Landscaping developed properties really has got to be a full partnership.
We can't get to 'end game' without it," Chitwood said.
And interestingly enough, newer property owners are taking it to heart, as
much for the economics as the aesthetics. A naturally landscaped property is
cheaper and easier to maintain. For example, it requires less fertilizer.
Out there in front of the effort is the retired physical organic chemistry
researcher, the man who in high school built a kayak out of plywood, fir
strips and canvas, and paddles it today in the Kiawah River.
"He asked a lot of questions. He continues to ask a lot of questions," said
Jim Jordan, town of Kiawah wildlife biologist. "Maybe his greatest value is
his ability to explain why something is important in a persuasive manner."
Of course, the effort has had its downside for Chitwood. Nowadays, even Judy
Chitwood, his wife, will pull him aside if she's seen something happening on
the island she doesn't like. "Jim, why don't you do something about it?" she
asks.
Ask Windham how valuable Chitwood has been and she gives a slow, thoughtful
shake of her head:
"The Kiawah Conservancy would not be where it is today without Jim Chitwood."
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