Chapters Book Club » Bobcats are New Jersey’s last remaining wild cats. June 13, 2018 @ 7:00 pm - 8:00 pm « On the Big Screen! The Nature Conservancy is trying to preserve 9,000 acres in northwestern New Jersey for a "Bobcat Alley" to help the endangered bobcat, whose population is about 250 in the state. CHANJ hopes to help reduce road mortality for bobcats and other endangered species. The public can help by reporting a bobcat observation with the Rare Wildlife Sighting Form (please include photos if you have them!). Bobcat Alley. The Nature Conservancy is working to protect critical habitat for these beautiful cats in New Jersey. CONNECTING HABITAT ACROSS NEW JERSEY is a statewide effort to link together wildlife corridors with areas of core habitat.
Ridge and Valley Conservancy, PO Box 146, 16 Main Street, Blairstown, NJ 07825 (908) 362 7989 info@ridgeandvalleyconservancy.org Location: Rooms 6&7
THE NATURE CONSERVANCY is working to create a wildlife corridor of preserved land in northwest New Jersey dubbed "Bobcat Alley.". The Nature Conservancy is trying to create “Bobcat Alley” so state’s endangered wild cats can roam unimpeded across northwestern N.J. On a map, Bobcat Alley is 32,000 acres outlined in red. Yep – and here's a way to save them. WORKING DOGS FOR CONSERVATION is a non … Report an injured or dead bobcat via the DEP Hotline: 1-877-WARNDEP (1-877-927-6337). Bobcat Fact Sheet (pdf, 815kb) Bobcats in New Jersey with biologist Gretchen Fowles (DEP Podcast, 3/29/17) NJ has bobcats? They call it "Bobcat Alley," and it's a place created by connecting preserved land between two great mountain ranges: the Appalachians and the Highlands. Join Kelly Grassi of the New Jersey Chapter of The Nature Conservancy to learn about these beautiful cats and their habitat. Several other colors represent plots of acreage already owned, under contract or what The Nature Conservancy considers essential to the project.