The 'road ecology' movement picks up speed
An international conference in Seattle gathers ideas about how roads and the environment interact. One big takeaway: pay more attention to the needs of wildlife to cross the mighty web of roadways.
Jones and Jones Architects
Cars, traffic jams, cities, transportation, and the environment — political and intellectual territory now so well worn that most of the debating points are rendered in ceaselessly contending code words. Is there any way to make that drone fresher, livelier, broader, and filled with greater sense both of portent and opportunity for the future? Let's give it a shot.
In 2003 a seminal book, Road Ecology (Island Press), cracked open the door to a much broader vista by asking: What was the relationship between roads and nature itself? Its lead author was a Harvard School of Design landscape architecture professor, Richard T.T. Forman. Its topics ran the gamut from how the spacing of roads alters the functioning of natural environments — ecosystems — across entire landscapes to how road noise affects songbird distribution and roadside herbicide use contaminates nearby water. It addressed roads themselves, not just cars, and rural and natural lands and waters, not just human communities. It marked and contributed new ways of thinking about transportation systems, their contexts, and their consequences.
Eight years later, Seattle this week has hosted the biennial International Conference on the Ecology and Transportation (ICOET), now the biggest periodic gathering of the road ecology movement. Once this was the transportation sector’s most arcane and even offbeat conference (“Your Ph.D. thesis covers precisely what aspect of lichen reproduction on gravel shoulders?”). Today the conference has become downright mainstream (right to the cash bar and nibbles-supper at the Seattle Aquarium) for scientists, government officials, and academics represented among 550 registrants including individual presenters from 21 countries.
One of ICOET’s important themes is promoting non-lethal, even peaceful, coexistence between vehicles traveling along roads and wildlife needing to cross them. This is a critical question for human road safety, species survival, and the very important values of ecosystem biodiversity. Highways in Florida have jaguar crossings; shoreline roads in Taiwan have crossings for breeding crabs; the new commuter rail line for Cape Cod has 52 crossings for spotted turtles; roads in Queensland are being planned to minimize vehicle strikes on the endangered flightless Southern Cassowary, one of the world’s largest birds. One senses that in not too many years, those imperatives will be regarded as standard operating expectations.
But frontiers of curiosity and concern for nature are constantly expanding. To graze ICOET, right in Seattle at the Westin Hotel, has been to learn, for example, that researchers studying railroad embankments in Sweden have identified 2,400 species of flora and fauna among which is a critical pollinator, rendered in English as the “Railway Bee,” for supporting agricultural prosperity on adjoining local farmlands. And the Swiss Academy of Road and Transport Experts has just published road ecology manuals for engineers. And the worldwide wildlife community is agonizing over the fate of some of the most important African animal migrations if the international development community should fail in efforts to persuade the government of Tanzania to relocate a proposed road away from most sensitive areas of the Serengeti plain.
Road Ecology author Richard Forman himself, now a bit of an international ecological rock-star (and no stranger to the Seattle area, with a son working locally for that big software company), was a two-day conference drop in. He was flying back to Boston from Beijing where he had just given the keynote at the first convening of the road ecologists in the Academy of Transportation Scientists at the Chinese Ministry of Transport. To find his book in the hands of Chinese road engineers, he told me, was his single most delicious delight in watching its influence spread far and wide in the eight years since its publication.
But he worries. Cars manufactured and bought, vehicle-miles-traveled, expressways built — he is amazed at what he has seen in China — are all expanding faster than road ecology thinking. At an impromptu conference talk, he urged that for protecting landscapes, restating nature, and addressing fossil fuel shortages, elevated personal rapid transit systems should be considered. An example is the new Podcar installation serving Masada Institute of Science and Technology in the United Arab Emirates, along with other possibilities that are often a topic of futurist transportation thinking in tech-savvy environments.
Maybe.
"Connectivity" is one of the buzzwords on the road ecology movement and therein lies the heart of the keeper message for us in Seattle. Our challenge is precisely the challenge the road ecology movement has identified in the realms of habitat, ecosystems, and landscape. Ultimately, the stakes at play in our transportation debates and policies are the future unique landscape and ecological character of the Puget Sound region. It is time seriously to reckon with how communities of people now and in the future affect and shape communities of nature and the uses of land and water that are, in the fullest sense of the word, our ecological landscapes.
We have not yet demonstrated the capacity to do this with real results at meaningful scale. When we shall, we will have begun to discover how shaping our human environments and protecting and preserving Puget Sound, in its panorama of water and watershed, are one and the same problem.
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Comments:
Posted Fri, Aug 26, 7:38 a.m. Inappropriate
Except in a few cases, our state's highway department seems to have missed this boat.
A big test will come over the next year: Will the state DOT actually embrace a robust set of investments to clean up the biggest cause and conveyor of water pollution around here: Roads.
Or, will construction required to clean up these roads be slighted by the DOT's overwhelming desire to build more of them?
Will the state's leadership even embrace the idea that ending the pollution from our state roads, is the state DOT's responsibility?
It would be great to see a plan from the state that integrates water pollution clean up with its other road maintenance and rehabilitation plans, with fix-it-first priority assigned to state roads that pollute.
Posted Fri, Aug 26, 8:38 a.m. Inappropriate
The 'road ecology' movement picks up speed
as it flies right past Common Sense and Fiscal Reality
Posted Fri, Aug 26, 10:49 a.m. Inappropriate
Greenwash.
Posted Fri, Aug 26, 11:42 a.m. Inappropriate
Mr. MacDonald,
Thank you for writing this and highlighting a different way of looking at transportation. I'll pick up the book you mentioned.
I found this link to the ICOET conference. I'll look that over, too. I didn't notice a link in the story.
http://www.icoet.net/ICOET_2011/
Posted Fri, Aug 26, 6:27 p.m. Inappropriate
This is an excellent article on an ecologiclaly important topic. I commend our former Secretary of Transportation for his concern about the impact of roads on fish and wildlife. However, I must take issue with the concept of "jaguar crossings" in Florida. Jaguars are vanishingly rare even in Mesoamerica, and more or less extinct in their last stronghold in the US in Arizona. Sadly, the last jaguar sighted in the US was recaptured after having been radiotagged, and euthanized by a US Fish and Wildlife employee after being found to be suffering from kidney failure. This incident set of an explosion of criticism of the very agency charged with protecting Jaguars under the ESA.
Posted Fri, Aug 26, 6:29 p.m. Inappropriate
Population recovery efforts are underway for the Florida panther, for which road crossings have in fact been built.
Posted Fri, Aug 26, 7:12 p.m. Inappropriate
Of course, you'll notice that the concept is always how we can fit the wildlife into our system. We'll make crossings for wildlife, rather than conceive how we can cross there habitat. The Florida crossings for Panthers are a good example. Build a high speed expressway to fuel sprawl right through the habitat of what is arguably the most endangered resident native feline in the US, and then try to mitigate the inevitable damage by retrofitting "crossings." How about downgrading the damn road to gravel with speed bumps so the cats aren't run down? Making it narrower with native vegetation encroaching closely on it, to reduce habitat fragmentation. But what the hell, it won't be long, anyway. Watch that CO2 rise. 394 ppm and rising. Enjoy it while you can, because its not going to last.
Posted Sat, Aug 27, 12:14 p.m. Inappropriate
This highway builder has more concern for PR than wild or any other kind of life. The article is pure greenwash for public consumption. Happy indigestion!
Posted Mon, Aug 29, 12:17 p.m. Inappropriate
I agree with the sentiments of Wells and Steve E.
While designing our roadways to be less-bad is probably better than nothing, it's a distraction from the overwhelming problems our road systems create. What I'd like from the pulpits of Doug MacDonald and others is a call for wiser system-wide design of our transportation system and its interconnections with the built environment.
Technical fixes at the margins simply can’t keep up with our accelerating conversion of materials and energy into stuff, useful or not. We can make some things ‘greener’, but they’re simply overwhelmed by the sheer volume of impacts added to our inventory of stuff to fix later.
Posted Mon, Aug 29, 4:06 p.m. Inappropriate
At least they are looking at Railroad beds as well as auto roads. The future in long distance travel is not going to be fossil fuel automobiles. Way too energy inefficient.
Locally the tribes had to sue the state (and won) to build the necessary culverts that should have been there all along for fish to migrate up streams crossed by roads. That's probably worth doing if for nothing else it will benefit our future food supply.
Posted Tue, Aug 30, 9:16 a.m. Inappropriate
Way too little way too late. So much hasn't been done, and we keep allowing the same mistakes to be repeated. It's past time for a class action suit against the FWHA, the state DOTs, and Big Cement. They are more culpable than Big Tobacco.
Posted Tue, Aug 30, 10:14 p.m. Inappropriate
It's amazing to see many of the autoroutes in Europe where tunnels and viaducts make the road hardly a barrier at all to crossing animals, wild and domestic. Here all we do is move earth, lots and lots of it. And another huge problem here is the hundreds of thousands of miles of collapsing logging roads carved across NW National Forests. For the Forest Service, roads equal money, so they are reluctant to let go of them. But only a small fraction of the mileage is ever properly maintained, the rest is slowly crumbling and working its way downstream, smothering spawning areas for salmon and other fish.
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