Beidler Forest is home to the largest remaining virgin forest of
bald cypress and tupelo gum trees in the world, including 1500 year-old
trees long vanished from the rest of North America. Audubon has managed the
forest sanctuary for 35 years.
Francis Beidler Forest recognized for international importance
Ramsar Certificate Awarded for Important Bird Area in
Rare Ancient Forest
The official designation of South Carolina's Francis Beidler Forest as a
Ramsar Wetland of International Importance underscores the need to protect
the vital resource from a host of threats, including sprawl, poorly
controlled mining and timber operations, and industrial agriculture. The
designation was celebrated at the annual meeting of the U.S. National
Ramsar Committee, hosted by the Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies
at the Hall of States on Capitol Hill.
Adopted in the Iranian city of Ramsar in 1971, the Ramsar Convention on
Wetlands promotes conservation of these vital habitats around the world.
Renowned Ramsar sites include Africa's Okavango Delta and the Florida
Everglades, but there are presently nearly 1,750 sites that have been
designated as Wetlands of International Importance, covering a surface area
of 161 million hectares, in the 158 countries that are parties to the
treaty. The relatively small Beidler Forest, covering 15,000 acres, will
become the 23rd Ramsar site in the U.S. and the first Audubon Sanctuary in
the country to achieve the Ramsar designation.
"Audubon is pleased that the unique conservation value of Beidler Forest is
being recognized by the International Ramsar Convention;" said John
Flicker, President of the National Audubon Society. "This designation
underscores the importance of protecting and preserving our wetlands; when
they disappear, so do birds and other wildlife, as well as natural flood
protection. The importance of a system like Beidler Forest cannot be
overstated."
Favored by hundreds of thousands of birds that migrate to South Carolina
after wintering in South America, the region was recognized as an Important
Bird Area in 2001.
"Beidler Forest is one of only a few sites in the U.S. recognized as both
an Important Bird Area and a Ramsar site, "said John Cecil, Director of the
Important Bird Areas Program for Audubon and the Society's Representative
on the U.S. Ramsar Committee. "This dual acknowledgement celebrates not
only the beauty and rich biodiversity found at Beidler, but the
collaboration of Audubon, its partners, and the communities in and around
Beidler. Each has played an essential role in conserving this jewel".
Some of the 140 bird species that nest or make migratory stops in Beidler
are on Audubon's list of Common Birds in Decline, including the Northern
Bobwhite, Eastern Meadowlark, Loggerhead Shrike, Field Sparrow, Common
Grackle, Whip-poor-will, and Little Blue Heron. The forest's Red-headed
Woodpecker, Swallow-tailed Kite, Wood Thrush, Prothonotary Warbler,
Kentucky Warbler, Prairie Warbler, Painted Bunting, Rusty Blackbird, and
Swainson's Warbler are on the Audubon WatchList.
These wetlands are also home to rare plants, including the Dwarf Trillium
(Trillium pusillum) a flower found only in South Carolina at Four Holes
Swamp at Beidler Forest
"These wetlands are essential to the people of South Carolina," said Norm
Brunswig, Director of Audubon South Carolina. "Beidler's 430,000-acre
watershed represents one-third of the total watershed of the longest, free-
flowing black water river in the U.S., the Edisto. Audubon's work upstream
helps to guarantee the quantity, quality and delivery schedule of water
downstream to places like the ACE Basin National Estuarine Reserve and
Wildlife Refuge."
Farming has replaced forest over of the adjacent uplands. Droughts over the
past several decades have triggered interest by farmers in damming
tributary swales as emergency sources of irrigation water. Other threats
to the ecosystem include logging; nearby limestone quarries and fill-dirt
mines; non-point-source water runoff from surrounding farms; incompatible
land uses; farming on the bluffs above the floodplain; urban sprawl from
Charleston and Summerville to the east; residential development due to
sprawl and industrial development as a result of Highway I-26's proximity;
and poorly designed or maintained private septic systems that pose a risk
of bacteria contamination to the Four Holes Swamp and its tributaries.
The Audubon Center at Beidler Forest offers a full range of environmental
educational opportunities. In 2007 over 12,000 people visited the Audubon
Center at Beidler Forest, contributing to the National Audubon Society's
nationwide effort to connect people with nature.