Fall 2012 - The Nature Conservancy
Transcription
Fall 2012 - The Nature Conservancy
update south carolina FALL 2012 Who Speaks for These Trees? Longleaf Pine Forests in the Sewee-to-Santee Region BY JESSICA GARRETT A peeling wooden sign marks the spot along Highway 41 where in 1998 the Dr. Seuss Lorax Project and American Forests replanted a strand of longleaf pine in Francis Marion National Forest, nine years after Hurricane Hugo decimated the area. continued on page 4... contents: From the Director ........................................................................................................2 TNC’s Water Works.....................................................................................................3 Who Speaks for These Trees? (continued) ...........................................................4 Conservation 365: Washo Reserve .........................................................................6 Member Corner: Beezer & Emily Molten ..............................................................7 PHOTOS © AMEY WARDER Legacy Profile: Joe and Terry Williams ...................................................................8 Boeing Volunteers Go from Aeronautical to Nautical .......................................9 Thank you Bernita! ......................................................................................................9 Donor Recognition (FY 2011-2012) ................................................................... 10 TNC Bookshelf .......................................................................................................... 12 Fall 2012 | SOUTH CAROLINA update | 1 from the director Greetings friends! I love this season in South Carolina, when summer’s humidity has lifted and it’s invigorating to be outside, enjoying our state’s incredible natural beauty. As the holidays approach, we begin to gather with loved ones and take stock of our blessings. But it’s also a busy season, and it is for us at TNC as well. Our staff isn’t simply counting South Carolina’s blessings but energetically working to protect them so future generations can experience our special places, from the Upstate’s serene mountains to the Lowcountry’s golden marshes. I am also proud that our efforts in the policy arena achieved a significant victory this summer, as the state legislature voted to extend funding of the South Carolina Conservation Bank to 2018, which otherwise would have “sunset” in 2013. The Conservation Bank is the single most important funding source for land conservation in South Carolina, with $7.5 million this year alone going toward land protection. This means that your investment in TNC gets magnified many times over for statewide impact. This newsletter highlights our ongoing work in one of the country’s most significant native forests – longleaf pine – a forest found only in the Southeastern U.S., a dynamic habitat that is hardy and durable, resistant to extremes of weather, but highly vulnerable to pressures of coastal development. TNC’s expert scientists and real estate specialists are zeroed in on land protection and fire management strategies in the Lowcountry’s Sewee-to-Santee. We are also forging creative partnerships such as the Sewee Forum, to engage community stakeholders in helping balance natural resource protection with the needs and values of the people who live and work amidst the longleaf pine forest. We face challenges, but with your support, TNC has the talent and resources to continue making headway. We look ahead to 2013 with renewed commitment and passion for our work. From efforts to ensure safe water supplies to our emphasis on marine and wetland ecology to our continued protection of Jones Gap and other upstate properties, TNC is making lasting impacts across South Carolina, and we are grateful for your partnership in this work. Not even the Lorax could do it by himself! BOARD OF TRUSTEES Mr. Terry E. Richardson, Jr. ~ Barnwell ~ -Chair Ms. Natalma M. McKnew ~ Greenville ~ Vice-Chair Mr. George A. Durban, III ~ Columbia ~ Treasurer Ms. Jessica Loring ~ Yemassee ~ Secretary Mrs. Patricia McAbee ~ Greenville Dr. David E. McIntyre ~ Dewees Island Mr. Arnold M. Nemirow ~ Charleston Dr. Richard D. Porcher, Jr. ~ Mt. Pleasant Dr. Douglas A. Rayner ~ Spartanburg Dr. Harry E. Shealy, Jr. ~ Aiken Ms. Langhorne T. Webster ~ Greenville Trustees Trustee Emeritus Ms. Ann R. Baruch ~ Spring Island Dr. Travis Folk ~ Green Pond Mr. Richard K. Heusel ~ Pawleys Island Ms. M. Russell Holliday, Jr. ~ Galivants Ferry Mr. William G. Lowrie ~ Brays Island Mr. Joseph H. Williams ~ Charleston I hope you will take a moment to renew your commitment to TNC and be proud of the contributions we make, together, to preserve the robust natural environment we are so lucky to call home. Thank you for making our work possible, Mark Robertson [email protected] PHOTO © AMEY WARDER Officers 2 | SOUTH CAROLINA update | Fall 2012 Honorary Trustee Mr. C. Thomas Wyche ~ Greenville TNC’S Water Works BY JESSICA GARRETT Water, water every where, Nor any drop to drink. —The Rhyme of the Ancient Mariner Samuel Taylor Coleridge Countless times each day you reach for the faucet and out streams clear, clean water. You may drink or wash with it, without thinking about where that water comes from or what steps have been taken to ensure that it’s clean. Not so for The Nature Conservancy. We follow drinking water from its source and work with partners to ensure that drinking water across the state is clean today and stays clean tomorrow. In Beaufort and Jasper Counties, some 200,000 South Carolinians get their drinking water from the Savannah River. The Savannah forms most of the border between South Carolina and Georgia and has the highest number of native fish species of any river on the Atlantic coast; the extensive hardwood forests in its floodplain are one of the most critical stopover sites for migratory songbirds. Maintaining a healthy Savannah River is vital for all the life that depends on it—plant, aquatic, aviary, and human—which is why TNC directs member support to its efforts to protect the Savannah’s floodplain, to conserve and protect the lands that drain into the river, and to manage the river’s flows through upstream dams. The Savannah’s floodplain extends across several hundred thousand acres, most of which is intact and has not been converted to agriculture or cut off by levees. Since 2005, TNC has doubled the acreage of protected forests along the Savannah, from 69,000 to 138,000 acres. The fact that this floodplain allows room for water to go downstream in case of natural disasters like hurricanes is crucial, according to Eric Krueger, South Carolina’s director of science and stewardship. “When we protect the floodplain,” Krueger says, “we protect the natural communities that thrive there. By doing so, the floodplain and its communities protect us when disaster strikes.” More recently, TNC has launched a fund to protect land draining into the river in order to protect raw water quality. Dean Moss, former general manager of the Beaufort Jasper Water Sewer Authority, explains that protecting surrounding land reduces contaminants that leach into the water, thereby reducing water treatment costs and improving safety for consumers. A third vital factor in a healthy Savannah River is the release of water from US Army Corps of Engineers’ reservoirs. These reservoirs control the river’s flow for all but the most rainfall-rich periods, and are especially impactful during drought. The Corps’ current Drought Operations Manual dates to the 1980s and does not account for the persistent droughts that have characterized the region in the last decade. In 2007, river flow recommendations proved so inadequate that reservoirs contained less than 60 days of release from conservation pools. Releasing water into the Savannah from below a given depth in the reservoirs—beyond the conservation pool—can harm river populations and require significantly more treatment because of poor water quality from the “inactive” pool. TNC is leading efforts to ensure reservoir releases promote a healthy Savannah River. Not only is TNC analyzing river data in order to propose new drought operations, it is also the lynchpin in gaining stakeholder consensus for new strategies for water management. According to Eric Krueger, “good water management cannot be executed simply through good science.” Stakeholder consensus—from government agencies, scientists, recreational users, utilities, and private enterprise—is equally important. TNC founded the Savannah River Basin Advisory Council (SRBAC), a 25-member organization of lay and science stakeholders, to advance consensus, and continues to work with this council to forge a more lasting solution to drought management in the Savannah. TNC is committed—365 days a year—to ensuring that members don’t have to worry about the quality and availability of their water supply. We welcome your support of this important work, so we can all raise a glass together. For more information about TNC’s Savannah River work, contact [email protected]. Fall 2012 | SOUTH CAROLINA update | 3 CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1... Who Speaks for These Trees? While the Dr. Seuss Lorax Project wasn’t entrusted with the last of the longleaf seeds, as the child at the end Dr. Seuss’s Lorax is, the story of longleaf parallels the children’s storybook in many ways. Like the MICHAEL PREVOST, FORMER TNC PROJECT Truffula Trees in Seuss’ DIRECTOR story, longleaf pine was once plentiful. It was the dominant forest of the coastal plain across nine states from Virginia to Texas, the only region on Earth where it exists. Longleaf covered more than 90 million acres, but after 300 years of intensive timber harvest, agricultural expansion, fire suppression, and urban development, less than three percent remains. And like Seuss’ story, saving the Truffula, or the longleaf, is also about saving the species that depend on them. More than 140 plant species can be found in one square kilometer of longleaf pine forest, and with nearly 900 indigenous plant species, this forest is as biologically diverse as tropical rainforests. “It’s about more than the tree, more than the understory. It’s the entire ecosystem,” explains the Sewee-to-Santee’s own Lorax, Michael Prevost, former project director with The Nature Conservancy (TNC). By conservative estimate, this region once hosted more than 420,000 acres of longleaf. Currently, only about 50,000 acres remain. According to Selden “Bud” Hill, director of McClellanville’s Village Museum and cultural historian of the Sewee-to-Santee region, “Nobody I know in recent history has done more for this area than Michael. He has preserved a massive number of acres.” As in, more than 25,000. The Santee Gun Club’s 1974 donation of 24,000 acres to TNC initiated the formal effort to conserve the region and its ecosystem. Prevost helped TNC complete 28 cooperative property acquisitions, resulting in the transfer of 7,000-plus acres to the United States Forest Service with another 2,000 acres planned for transfer in the next two years, after TNC completes initial longleaf restoration efforts. In addition, he helped TNC secure 31 conservation easements in the region, protecting more than 16,000 additional acres. A Catalyst for Land Protection In 2005, when a 100-acre parcel of longleaf Lake Moultrie 17 Yawkey WMA Francis Marion National Forest 45 Washo Reserve Santee Coastal Reserve y un t Co ton Ch ar Be rk McClellanville les ele y Co un ty Bonneau Ferry State WMA 41 life ug e R ef ain Na Privately Protected Bulls Bay State Protected Ca p eR om TNC Protected Lands Sewee to Santee TNC Project Francis Marion NF Boundary ti ild W al on Federally Protected Urban Areas Atlantic Ocean 17 526 The circa 1768 chapel, worship place for some of the nation’s founding families, was once described by 20th-century poet Archibald Rutledge as “a shrine in the wilderness, flanked on three sides by the immense loneliness of the pine forest.” To Hill, the potential sale of surrounding acreage meant jeopardizing the church’s historical and ecological context. “Part of protecting the church is making sure that property around it stays as is—as conserved land,” he says. TNC moved into high gear, raising $150,000 from private donors towards the parcel’s purchase. Leveraging this with grants from the South Carolina Conservation Bank and the Charleston County Greenbelt Program, the private dollars helped TNC and its partners raise an additional $450,000—that’s three public dollars for every one private dollar. Furthermore, that 100 acres leveraged an additional 2,200 protected acres through two separate transactions. Thus, TNC’s original 100-acre purchase was the catalyst to protect 2,300 acres in the Sewee-to-Santee region, each providing enhanced opportunities for longleaf conservation. What’s Next? Georgetown Wee Tee WMA pine forest across from the historic Brick Church at Wambaw came up for sale, TNC and its partners took fast action. Interstates TNC is now heavily involved in the next phase of Sewee-to-Santee conservation: restoring the longleaf ecosystem. Much of the original range of longleaf is in good condition for restoration. However if the longleaf pine forest is to return, a dedicated land management effort—and constant coordination with partners such as the US Forest Service and the country’s preeminent longleaf pine authority, the Joseph W. Jones Ecological Research Center—is necessary. On a forest tour, Prevost, who currently works with White Oak Forestry, points out longleaf seedlings planted in conjunction with the Forest Service and the Joseph Jones Center. To date, Prevost estimates, some 685 acres of seedlings have been planted, with another 300 acres identified Major Roads Capers Island HP 26 More than 140 plant species can be found in one square kilometer of longleaf pine forest, and with nearly 900 indigenous plant species, this forest is as biologically diverse as tropical rainforests. Charleston 4 | SOUTH CAROLINA update | Fall 2012 for future planting. Once longleaf seedlings have been established for two years, they are hardy. As Prevost explains, a 90% survival rate is both ideal and realistic. But longleaf—whether nascent as on this tract or mature as in other places in the region—requires more than land protection and replanting to flourish. In fact, TNC’s restoration efforts involve what many assume is only destructive: fire. THE HISTORIC “PATH” OF THIS LAND—FROM SWAMP TO RICE PLANTATION TO SHOOTING CLUB TO PRESERVE—IS INDICATIVE OF “THE EVOLUTION OF A LOCAL CONSERVATION ETHIC.” —MICHAEL PREVOST “Fire has been part of the longleaf pine cycle forever. With longleaf, fire is as important as rain and sunshine,” explains Tom Dooley, TNC’s State Fire Manager. Fire is essential every two to three years to reduce the fuel load on the forest floor, increase recruitment of longleaf seedlings, eliminate hardwood competition, and enable the establishment of saplings. “Longleaf’s high rosin content has made it fire-adapted. What’s more, its long, flammable needles might actually promote the regular fires it needs to spread out and be as dominant as it was centuries ago,” Dooley adds. In addition to conducting the necessary prescribed burns on lands under TNC’s management, Dooley and TNC’s fire crew assist the US Forest Service by applying prescribed burns to about 30,000 acres of longleaf forests each year. In the coming years, TNC will collaborate even more closely with the Jones Center and with private landowners to expand the number of private lands treated with regular prescribed fire. The historic “path” of this land—from swamp to rice plantation to shooting club to preserve—is indicative of “the evolution of a local conservation ethic,” according to Prevost, one that began because early European settlers and their descendants viewed large tracts as single entities that ought to stay together. Protecting these large tracts through prescribed fire and collaborating with TNC’s public and private partners are the mutually reinforcing conservation strategies that will help restore longleaf pine forests and their biological diversity. Twenty years from now, Prevost foresees “a land base that protects rural values, forestry, small farms, and inherent biological diversity because its citizens are dedicated to its protection for the long term.” Like the Lorax, he hopes everyone will speak for the forest ecosystem. PHOTOS © AMEY WARDER Fall 2012 | SOUTH CAROLINA update | 5 CONSERVATION 365 Washo Reserve BY STEPHANIE HUNT Like many of South Carolina’s conservation parcels, Washo Reserve was once a hunting preserve, part of 24,000 acres acquired by TNC in 1974 from the Santee Gun Club. Today this 1,040-acre parcel within the Santee Coastal Reserve harbors a 200-acre cypress lake and one of the oldest and longest continuous-use rookeries in North America. Home to more than 200 wood stork nests each year, Washo’s rookery rests on an old, stagnant impoundment now threatened by encroaching vegetation and dying cypress trees. Although hard woods are sprouting from the base of dying trees and on floating vegetation, it is uncertain if these new trees (mostly tupelos) are adequate for wood stork nesting. Without more cypress regeneration and a means to remove the floating vegetation, it may be hard for wading birds to continue to be successful. TNC is implementing a new management strategy to ensure Washo’s long-term rookery viability. After gathering a group of experts with knowledge of wetland impoundments and wading bird management, TNC is building a drawdown structure to manipulate water levels, reduce aquatic vegetation and aerate cypress roots, promoting regeneration. We will monitor both vegetation changes and nest success throughout this process to better understand how this management strategy will impact the nesting habitat. This project will not only guide TNC in stewarding Washo Reserve, but will help other land managers with similar habitat parameters. We invite you to join TNC in tracking the wood storks and other rookery birds on Facebook: www.facebook.com/pages/Washo-WoodStorks/114701865336534 For more information on how you can support Conservation 365 at Washo Reserve, contact Collette Degarady at [email protected]. PHOTO © COLLETTE DEGARADY PHOTO © COLLETTE DEGARADY 6 | SOUTH CAROLINA PHOTO © COLLETTE DEGARADY update | Fall 2012 PHOTO © TOM BLAGDEN membercorner BE E Z E R & E M I LY MOLTE N BY STEPHANIE HUNT The Nature Conservancy is the organization that best impacts habitat protection across the whole state,” says Half-Moon Outfitters founder and president Beezer Molten, a South Carolina boy in the broadest sense. Molten grew up on a farm near Fountain Inn, spent summers on Pawley’s Island, weekends and vacations at his grandmother’s in Caesar’s Head, learned to fly fish near Jones Gap, then moved with his family to Columbia. Today Beezer and his wife Emily, a Greenville native, live in the Lowcountry, on Sullivan’s Island. Molten’s passion for the outdoors is obvious to any Half-Moon shopper, as is his commitment to customer service and environmental stewardship, both of which have garnered national accolades—Half-Moon was named Best Outfitter (2011) and Sustainable Business of the Year (2009) by SNEWS/Backpacker Magazine. “After college I spent time fly-fishing in Silver Creek, Idaho, an unbelievably beautiful place, and TNC is responsible for protecting that pristine spring-fed creek,” says Molten. “Even though completely broke, I gave my first $50 to a non-profit (TNC) after fishing those waters, and started Half-Moon right after, so you could say TNC has impacted my company and my vision from the beginning.” Now with eight stores across South Carolina and Georgia, Half-Moon seeks to give back and make an impact across the state, not just in any one region. Through its sponsorship of the internationally acclaimed Banff Film Festival—the proceeds of which they donate to TNC—Half-Moon not only brings the best in outdoor/adventure film to South Carolina, it helps insure that outdoor enthusiasts inspired by these films will have places in South Carolina to go hiking, camping, climbing and exploring. “Our company isPHOTO committed to © DOTTIE SCHIPPER doing what we can, where we can for habitat protection—that’s what it’s about for us, so we are delighted to partner with TNC and support this work,” says Molten. Membership: A Perfect Holiday Gift! It always fits and is guaranteed to give pleasure for years to come. Gift memberships are available at every level: $50 memberships and up include a year’s subscription to Nature Conservancy magazine. Every member receives newsletters and updates, plus a personalized gift notice from you. Commemorate anniversaries, celebrate birthdays, or take care of your holiday gift list online at nature.org/ joinanddonate or call (803) 254-9049 X43. Fall 2012 | SOUTH CAROLINA update | 7 LEGACY PROFILE: Joe and Terry Williams BY STEPHANIE HUNT The tallgrass prairies of Oklahoma are far afield from the golden marshes of South Carolina, but not to Joe and Terry Williams. Despite deep South Carolina roots, including having lived on Spring Island for 15 years before moving to Charleston, the Williams find Lowcountry marsh grass and Western prairie tallgrass equally beautiful and their threatened ecosystems equally worthy of protection. In fact, when business brought Joe, a Camden, S.C. native who grew up as a woodsman hunting and fishing on his family’s historic Mulberry Plantation, to Tulsa, Oklahoma, he became fascinated by tallgrass prairies, and concerned by their plight. “It’s an incredible landscape, but at the time, less than three percent of tallgrass prairie was still in its original condition,” Joe says. After years of dedicated and determined effort, Joe Williams prevailed, and with the help of groundbreaking, creative public/private conservation partnership led by The Nature Conservancy, they helped protect one of the largest remaining tracts of tallgrass prairie in the world. Today the Nature Conservancy’s Tallgrass Praire PHOTO © AMEY WARDER Preserve in the Osage Hills is a 46,000-acre ode to the chapter of TNC and serving as its first grasslands that once covered 220,000 square miles of the United States. Before these prairies chairman, Joe has been a rare two-time chairman of the TNC National Board of began succumbing to development and Governors, where he helped initiate the agricultural/ranching uses, millions of bison Conservancy’s hallmark large scale conservation roamed these vast grasslands. In an emotional efforts, of which Tallgrass Prairie Preserve was a 1993 ceremony, Joe and Terry watched as the first. “Today, TNC is going international with endangered buffalo were reintroduced to the this type of large scale conservation, showing preserve as part of TNC’s ecosystem tremendous ingenuity. This, I believe, is the management plan. way to really make a difference,” says Joe, a In addition to helping create the Oklahoma recipient of The Nature Conservancy’s 8 | SOUTH CAROLINA update | Fall 2012 Lifetime Volunteer Achievement Award for his dedication to preserving the world’s remaining natural beauty and habitat. Today Joe and Terry enjoy traveling on TNC trips and supporting the South Carolina Chapter, for which Joe now serves on the board as Trustee Emeritus. And their love and respect for wild places and for protecting the environment is part of their whole family’s legacy –– all three Williams sons work in related fields: one is a professor and evolutionary biologist, one with a graduate degree in wildlife management and one a former National Outdoor Leadership School instructor and TNC staffer who is president and CEO of The Wilderness Society. The Williams know that conservation takes effort and resources. “In Oklahoma, everyone said we couldn’t do it,” says Joe, recalling the naysayers when trying to save Tallgrass Prairie Preserve. “But we kept trying. It requires perseverance. Conservation takes time and people who are committed.” To ensure that their family’s commitment to conservation will endure, Joe and Terry have been regular supporters and have made a planned gift to TNC. “Joe and Terry are a constant inspiration to me,” says Monte Gaillard, Director of Philanthropy for the SC chapter. “They are leaving a true legacy to conservation, not just through their planned giving, but in the way they live their life.” To find out more about becoming a Legacy Member and the South Carolina Nature Conservancy’s planned giving opportunities, contact Monte Gaillard at [email protected] or (843) 937-8807, extension 14. The Conservancy’s southeast marine conservation efforts begin miles from shore in the deep waters of the Atlantic. There, TNC has initiated a regional marine mapping project designed to characterize critical coastal and ocean habitats from North Carolina to the Florida Keys. Mapping these resources is just the starting point; the goal is to use this information to help inform ocean management decisions such as energy development, port expansion, and beach re-nourishment. This requires The Conservancy to work with a wide variety of partners—state and federal agencies, universities, businesses and ocean user groups —as the information is gathered and distributed. Closer to land, TNC is collaborating with other partners, namely hardy volunteers from Boeing, to help improve the health of South Carolina’s estuarine waters. Boeing Corporation employees stepped out of the hangar and into the intertidal marsh this past July to install “oyster castles” as part of a Boeing-sponsored effort to create beneficial marine habitat that will enrich the ecological diversity in Cape Romain National Wildlife Refuge. Over the course of two days, 40 Boeing PHOTO © MONTE GAILLARD Boeing Volunteers Go from Aeronautical to Nautical volunteers joined a TNC team that included Coastal Expeditions, the US Fish & Wildlife Service, local volunteers, and the Dupre Family, whose Palmetto Plantation is newly under conservation easement with TNC and served as a spot for volunteers to gather for lunch and an ideal staging area for the transport boats and materials. The work required stamina and heavy lifting as volunteers created a human chain to hoist 1,000 oyster castle blocks from dock to boat to the build site. Volunteers then stacked the blocks like Legos to form the 60’ x 6’ x 3’ structure that will serve as substrate for oyster growth. “Oysters are a keystone species,” explains marine restoration specialist Joy Brown. “They create a complex habitat that supports many creatures, and they improve water quality as each oyster can filter 50 gallons of water a day.” TNC has contracted with the College of Charleston to monitor the site in the coming months to document oyster population growth and shoreline response around the reef structure. Earlier projects installed with SC DNR in Cape Romain have shown positive results. Thank you, Boeing, for your prowess in building oyster habitat as well as airplanes! THANK YOU BERNITA! Bernita Cooper, a senior at Claflin College, spent her summer interning in our Columbia office, adding her spitfire and delightfully positive spirit to numerous TNC projects. “My main focus was helping research companies for the South Carolina chapter’s Corporate Council for the Environment,” the Hemingway, SC native says. A communications and public relations major, Bernita is excited about entering the job world after graduation, including possible work in the non-profit arena based on her experience at TNC. “Working with the SC chapter of TNC was a lifestyle change for me. I’m much more aware now of how my actions affect the environment. I have a greater appreciation for how what we do now will impact the future and generations to come.” Thank you, Bernita, for your good work and helping us make that impact! PHOTO © MONTE GAILLARD Fall 2012 | SOUTH CAROLINA update | 9 thank you TO THE MANY FRIENDS OF THE SOUTH CAROLINA CHAPTER OF THE NATURE CONSERVANCY $25,000 and above Alcoa Foundation Alcoa Primary Metal American Forests Boeing Charleston Corp. Buist Moore Smythe McGee, P.A. Coleman Matching Gift Fund for SBR Community Foundation of Greenville Mrs. Lillian C. Darby Gaylord and Dorothy Donnelley Foundation Duke Energy The Duke Energy Foundation DuPre Family Foundation for the Carolinas Mr. & Mrs. H. Laurance Fuller The MeadWestvaco Foundation Dr. Jack R. Postle Mr. & Mrs. Fred Stanback Jr. Turner Foundation White Family Mr. & Mrs. Joseph H. Williams Yawkey Foundations $10,000-24,999 Anonymous (2) Ms. Ann R. Baruch Mr. Bob C. Baugh Blue Cross Blue Shield of S.C. BMW Manufacturing Corp. Mr. & Mrs. C. Austin Buck Jr. Daniel-Mickel Foundation of South Carolina Mr. & Mrs. Joe A. Erwin Felburn Foundation, Inc. Mrs. Mary Simms F. Gregory The Hartfield Foundation Mr. Lawrence K. Hill Hollingsworth Funds, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Rob Howell Mr. Michael F. Jaskwhich Estate of Mrs. Eleanor Y. Keilen Mr. & Mrs. Thomas J. Kester Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Laco Mr. & Mrs. Hugh C. Lane Jr. Ms. Janet Masters Mr. & Mrs. Thomas F. Mauldin Dr. & Mrs. David E. McIntyre Mills Bee Lane Memorial Foundation Mr. Arnold M. Nemirow 10 | SOUTH CAROLINA update | PHOTO © ASHLEY DEMOSTHENES Your generosity supports our mission, enabling TNC to preserve the natural resources that represent the diversity of life on Earth by protecting the lands and waters that people and nature need to survive. The members listed here have made gifts during our fiscal year July 1, 2011 to June 30, 2012. Note: Due to space limitations we regret that we are not able to list all gift levels. Dr. & Mrs. Harvey G. Ouzts The Priester Foundation The Honorable & Mrs. Alex M. Sanders Dr. & Mrs. H. E. Shaw Jr. Mrs. George R. Thompson Jr. & Mr. George Thompson Mr. & Mrs. Richard O. Webb Mrs. Langhorne T. Webster Mr. & Mrs. William M. Webster III The Williams Companies, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Marshall Winn Mr. C. T. Wyche $5,000-9,999 Anonymous (3) Mr. & Mrs. Ivan V. Anderson Jr. Brumley Family Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Frank Brumley Mrs. Donna R. Cart Central Carolina Community Foundation Ceres Foundation Inc. Cliffs Management Services, LLC Mr. Hugh W. Close Coastal Community Foundation of South Carolina Mr. & Mrs. Dan Coenen Mr. & Mrs. William Collins Cooper Investments, L.P. Dr. & Mrs. David L. Cull Dr. Stephen L. Gavel Mr. & Mrs. Andrew L. Hawkins Mr. & Mrs. Jonathan E. Heigel Mr. & Mrs. Richard K. Heusel Mr. & Mrs. R. Glenn Hilliard Ms. Christie Douglas & Ms. Russell Holliday Holliday Associates Dr. William C. Jernigan & Dr. Celia M. Thomas Mr. & Mrs. Hurdle H. Lea Fall 2012 Ms. Jessica Loring & Mr. Laurence G. Rasmussen Mr. & Mrs. Horace Lothmann Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Erwin E. Maddrey II The Maddrey Foundation Mr. & Mrs. W. Wallace McDowell Jr. Ms. Natalma M. McKnew, Esq. Multiple Listing Service of Greenville Naturaland Trust Parkland Trust Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Donald Pilzer Mr. Phillip Pittman Mrs. Dorothy Poston Brooks Quinn Ms. Rita S. Rao Raymond James Charitable Endowment Fund Dr. Douglas A. Rayner & Ms. Ellen Tillett Mr. & Mrs. Porter B. Rose Mrs. Genevieve L. Sakas & Dr. Basil Manly IV Spartanburg County Foundation Stephens Inc. Ms. Diane Terni TSC Foundation Vanguard Charitable Endowment Program Mr. & Mrs. Irvine T. Welling III Mr. Mack I. Whittle Jr. $2,500-4,999 Mr. & Mrs. Thomas G. Baker The Beaufort Fund Mr. & Mrs. Frank M. Bell Jr. Mr. & Mrs. William Bell Dr. Michael Brannon Community Foundation for Greater Atlanta Ms. Jane Rush Davenport Mr. & Mrs. John O. Downing Mr. & Mrs. John A. Dreher Mr. & Mrs. James Fowler Mr. Martin Gleason Mr. & Mrs. Bobby Hartness Hayne Hipp Foundation Ms. Nancy K. Hedrick Emily and Numa Hero Mr. & Mrs. W. Hayne Hipp Mrs. M. Russell Holliday Jr. & Mr. Arthur H. Cottingham Horry Telephone Cooperative, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Larkin Jennings Ms. Linda Ketelaar Mr. & Mrs. Charles Lee Legatus Foundation Mr. & Mrs. T. Michael Long Mr. John F. Martin Piedmont Natural Gas Company The Post and Courier Foundation Prudential Foundation Matching Gifts Program Mr. Joseph M. Ryan Jr. SC Manufacturers Alliance Schwab Charitable Fund Mr. Wade H. Sherard III Stony Point Foundation University of South Carolina Mr. Van Watts III $1,000-2,499 Anonymous (2) Mr. Walter Aerni Mr. William Algary Mr. & Mrs. Stan Andrie Mr. & Mrs. Gayle Averyt B.C. Moore Foundation Ms. Karen Baker Barr, Unger and McIntosh, LLC PHOTO © MONTE GAILLARD Mr. Russell Bauknight Mr. & Mrs. Dana Beach Mrs. Edward B. Beard Mr. T. A. Beard & Dr. Carol Graf Mrs. D. M. Beattie Mrs. Katrina H. Becker Sara A. Betts Ms. Lillian T. Bindseil Mr. John M. Bissell Ms. Martha C. Black & Mr. George E. Crouch Mr. John V. Boehme Mr. & Mrs. Steven Bryant Mr. & Mrs. Thomas W. Bunn Joan Burket Dr. Garrett Clanton Community Foundation Of The Lowcountry, Inc. Community Foundation of Western NC Mr. & Mrs. John Cooney Mr. & Mrs. Edwin Cooper III Mr. Harry J. Crow Jr. Mr. Richard K. Davis & Mrs. Karen L. Rylander-Davi Mr. Gregory C. De Camp Dorothy D. Smith Charitable Foundation Mrs. Laura E. duPont Mr. & Mrs. George A. Durban III Mr. Robert M. Erwin Mr. & Mrs. William L. Exley Mr. & Mrs. John S. Featherston Mr. & Mrs. John Fellows Travis Folk, Ph.D. Mr. & Mrs. Charles Ford Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence T. Foster Francis Beidler Foundation The Frankovics Mr. & Mrs. Harold F. Gallivan III The Garden Club of S.C., Inc. General Electric Foundation Matching Gift Program Mr. & Mrs. Don George Mr. & Mrs. Michael Giese Mr. & Mrs. Andrew Gilbert Dr. Greg Goodear Mr. & Mrs. Jim Gorman Hancock Forest Management, Inc. Mr. Miles Hayes & Ms. Jacqueline Michel Mrs. Catherine E. Heigel Hilton Head Plantation Property Owners Association, Inc. Mr. & Mrs. Anne S. Holleman III Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Howard Mr. & Mrs. Terry R. Huggins Mr. & Mrs. Robert E. Hughes Jr. Ms. Dawn F. Huntley Mr. Richard W. Hutson Jr. Mr. Glenn Jacobs Mr. & Mrs. Otis Allen Jeffcoat III PHOTO © MONTE GAILLARD John Winthrop Charity Trust Phifer Johnson Foundation Mr. & Mrs. George D. Johnson Jr. Mr. George R. Johnson Linda & Larry Johnson Sarah Jones Mr. Peter Kalivas Mr. & Mrs. William W. Kehl Mr. & Mrs. Charles Keith Mr. & Mrs. J. Richard Kelly Mr. & Mrs. S. T. Kilty Mr. & Mrs. Alex Kliros Ms. Julia E. Krebs & Roger Hux Mr. & Mrs. Charles G. Lane Law Offices Of Robert Dodson, P.A. Ms. Anne Rhodes Lee Mr. & Mrs. Paul Lehner Mr. & Mrs. William C. Lortz Ms. Catherine Love Mr. & Mrs. Thomas V. Malloy Mr. & Mrs. Clarence B. Manning Mr. & Mrs. Matthew T. Marlow Mr. & Mrs. John E. Masaschi Mr. & Mrs. Curtis R. Maxwell Ms. Patti McAbee Ms. Karin E. McCormick Mr. Ron McGimpsey Rebecca J. & Becky McKay Dr. & Mrs. William McWilliams Jr. Mr. & Mrs. M. Lane Morrison Artus & Ginny Moser Mrs. Cindy Nord Mr. & Mrs. Jim O’Connor Mr. & Mrs. Robert L. Olson Mr. Russell Park & Kimberly Ann Halley Mr. Robert H. Payne & Ms. Elizabeth T. Thomas Mr. & Mrs. Gordon R. Pollock Dr. Richard D. Porcher Jr. Gerald E. & June R. Pusser Mr. C. Niles Ray Mrs. Patricia Reed & Mr. Kim Reed Mrs. May Rhea Joseph Rice Mr. & Mrs. Mark L. Robertson Mr. Doug J. Robinson Mr. L. Roel Dr. & Mrs. Robert M. Rogers Mr. & Mrs. Jim Rothnie Ms. Nina Rumbough & Mr. Jan Roosenburg Dr. & Mrs. William E. Russell Sara Rutledge SC Council on Competitiveness Mrs. Laurinda Schenck Mr. & Mrs. M. Weldon Schenck Mr. & Mrs. C. B. Schmidt II The Schuiling Fund Mr. & Mrs. James M. Shoemaker Jr. Mr. & Mrs. Robert C. Shufeldt Mr. & Mrs. George Smyth Jr. State Of South Carolina Mr. Craig O. Stine & Dr. Jeannette Wilcox Ms. Virgil Story Ms. Catherine M. Sullivan Mr. & Mrs. Tom Taylor Mr. & Mrs. Benjamin G. Team Jr. The George E. Crouch Foundation Mr. & Mrs. Jacques S. Theriot Mr. & Mrs. Samuel Thorne Mr. & Mrs. Dean O. Trytten Mr. & Mrs. James Uffelman Mr. Alden G. Valentine Vortex Foundation Wade Crow Engineering Mr. & Mrs. William M. Webster IV Ms. Alexandra F. Whitley & Mr. Philip Whitley Mr. Nelson Willoughby Wilson Farms Company LLC Mr. John Winthrop Mr. & Mrs. Doyle R. Yates Ziff Properties, Inc. Matching Gift Companies Bank of America Matching Gifts CCM Investment Advisors Freddie Mac Foundation General Electric Foundation Matching Gifts Goldman Sachs Matching Gifts Program IBM Employee Services Center Lowe’s Charitable & Educational Foundation Lowe’s Companies, Incorporated Microsoft Corporation Prudential Foundation Matching Gifts The Williams Companies, Inc. Fall 2012 | SOUTH CAROLINA update | 11 South Carolina Chapter 2231 Devine Street, Suite 100 Columbia, SC 29205 nature.org/southcarolina ASCDA2013019NL Discover Ways to Give & Save by Leaving a Lasting Legacy Explore the many ways you can help meet your financial goals and maximize your philanthropic giving through sound and timely gift planning with The Nature Conservancy. Visit nature.org/gift-planning for more information or contact by email [email protected] or phone (877) 812-3698. Renew your membership today! Help to ensure a healthy future and feel confident your support is making a difference for nature. To renew or view your benefits visit nature.org/membership Bequests: How to Name The Nature Conservancy Legal Designation: For gifts that will take effect after your lifetime, The Nature Conservancy should be named as: The Nature Conservancy, a nonprofit corporation, organized and existing under the laws of the District of Columbia, and with principal business address of 4245 North Fairfax Drive, Suite 100, Arlington, Virginia 22203-1606. TNC Bookshelf For further reading on topics covered in this newsletter, our staff recommends the following titles: Looking for Longleaf: The Fall and Rise of An American Forest by Lawrence S. Early (UNC Press, 2006) Conserving Southern Longleaf by Albert G. Way (University of Georgia Press, 2011) The Nature Principle: Human Restoration and the End of Nature by Richard Louv (Algonquin, 2011) You can specify that the gift be used in South Carolina or another state or country by adding this additional phrase: to be used to further the purposes of the The Nature Conservancy in South Carolina…(or in Wyoming…or in Costa Rica, etc.) Mixed Sources Financial information about The Nature Conservancy may be obtained by contacting us at 4245 North Fairfax Drive, Suite 100, Arlington, VA 22203; (703) 841-5300. PRINTED WITH SOY-BASED INKS ©2012 The Nature Conservancy South Carolina Chapter.