The results of the 1st ever Jamaica Bay BioBlitz are available!
Scientists, naturalists and volunteers found 653 species ranging from aquatic plants to salamanders to migrating waterfowl and mammals in the inaugural 24-hour BioBlitz of the Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge.
The Gateway National Recreation Area (i.e. Gateway) comprises over 26,000 acres in New York and New Jersey, including much of the tidal estuary called Jamaica Bay. Gateway is the oldest urban national Park and contains the only wildlife refuge managed by the National Park Service (NPS). Gateway properties also include Jacob Riis Park, Plumb Beach, Fort Tilden, the Breezy Point tip, and Floyd Bennett Field (an historical site demarking New York City's first municipal airport).
Jamaica Bay is a nutrient rich estuary covering nearly 32 square miles and over 13,000 acres, and is also the largest natural open space in New York City.
Located on the
southwestern tip of Long Island, in the boroughs of
Brooklyn and Queens, and the town of Hempstead in Nassau
County, Jamaica Bay is also connected to Lower New York Bay and the Atlantic Ocean
via the Rockaway Inlet. The majority of the area is publicly owned by
the federal government and city of New York.
Several
city parks also fall within the Jamaica Bay complex,
including Marine and Edgemere Parks, and numerous smaller
parcels of city owned lands. Some wetland and upland
areas are part of the John F. Kennedy International
Airport, owned by the City of New York and operated
by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. Smaller
upland areas surrounding the Bay remain in private,
residential or commercial ownership.
Jamaica Bay is a regionally significant resource for fish and wildlife.
Its waters, uplands, and barrier beaches also provide invaluable
respite and recreational opportunities for the New York City metropolitan
community. The bay is the frequent subject of research and management
of its wildlife, fisheries, waters, and marshes. This site captures
the myriad management and research activities occurring in the
Bay, including the latest research, descriptive information on the
many Bay stakeholders, highlights on future activities, and links
to other related sites.
|