This past weekend, volunteers relocated greenhead flytraps after being asked to remove them from the Edwin B. Forsythe National Wildlife Refuge.
Tom Beaty, vice president of the Holgate Taxpayers Association, said his group was asked to remove the traps after officials learned of their presence within the refuge.
“It’s been an ongoing thing,” Beaty said, referring to the presence and maintenance of the traps. “We’ve been doing this for about the last dozen years or so.”
“The flies get pretty bad in Holgate,” Beaty said. “We get predominantly southerly winds.”
Those winds, traveling over the refuge’s marshy areas on the southern end of Long Beach Island, bring flies with them.
Virginia Rettig, refuge manager, explained her decision to ask the group to remove the black box traps.
“The placing of man-made boxes on refuge land is just not an approved activity,” Rettig said. “It’s nothing I had ever given permission for. It was a cause for concern. In the past, I had seen the traps but they were not on refuge property, they were to the north.
“But their presence was not what I would consider authorized use of the wildlife refuge. Maintaining them there would not be an approved activity.”
http://thesandpaper.villagesoup.com...ed-moved-from-federal-wildlife-refuge/1023185
Tom Beaty, vice president of the Holgate Taxpayers Association, said his group was asked to remove the traps after officials learned of their presence within the refuge.
“It’s been an ongoing thing,” Beaty said, referring to the presence and maintenance of the traps. “We’ve been doing this for about the last dozen years or so.”
“The flies get pretty bad in Holgate,” Beaty said. “We get predominantly southerly winds.”
Those winds, traveling over the refuge’s marshy areas on the southern end of Long Beach Island, bring flies with them.
Virginia Rettig, refuge manager, explained her decision to ask the group to remove the black box traps.
“The placing of man-made boxes on refuge land is just not an approved activity,” Rettig said. “It’s nothing I had ever given permission for. It was a cause for concern. In the past, I had seen the traps but they were not on refuge property, they were to the north.
“But their presence was not what I would consider authorized use of the wildlife refuge. Maintaining them there would not be an approved activity.”
http://thesandpaper.villagesoup.com...ed-moved-from-federal-wildlife-refuge/1023185