Westmoreland Conservancy Expands King Reserve By 26 Acres
Photo

The Westmoreland Conservancy recently announced after a process that took seven years, they have expanded King Reserve by 26 acres.

The largest of the conservancy’s holdings, the now 122-acre parcel is also one of the Conservancy’s most biologically diverse, having the greatest variety of plants.

The reserve features a small intermittent stream named Sylvan Run (now further protected with this latest acquisition, along with the stream’s floodplain) and a short section of a tributary of Haymaker Run known as Pearson’s Creek. Meadows, shrub thickets, and both secondary succession and mature forest make up the remainder of the habitats.

Located in Murrysville in Westmoreland County, the land that is now King Reserve had been in the King family since 1879 before the family sold the land to Westmoreland Conservancy in 1996 to protect it from development.

For more information on programs, initiatives, upcoming events and how you can get involved, visit the Westmoreland Conservancy website.

(Reprinted from the PA Land Trust Association News webpage.)

Related Articles:

-- Eden Hill Conservancy Donates Conservation Easements On 207 Acres In Huntingdon County To Western PA Conservancy

-- Allegheny Land Trust Protects 155 Acres In Elizabeth Township, Allegheny County

-- Westmoreland Conservancy Expands King Reserve By 26 Acres

-- Natural Lands Helps Add 14 Acres To Nockamixon State Park In Bucks County

-- Powdermill Nature Reserve In Westmoreland County Receives $1 Million Avian Research Grant From Mellon Foundation

-- Brandywine Conservancy Seeks Public Input On Birmingham Hill Preserve

-- Pocono Heritage Land Trust To Merge With Pocono Avian Research Center In Monroe County

-- PA Clean Water Academy: Learn More About Streamside Buffers

-- Wildlands Conservancy: Land Protection 101, Bat Counts, Other Programs Coming Up!

-- Op-Ed: PA's Howard Zahniser Should Be Included In National Garden Of American Heroes

[Posted: July 9, 2020]


7/13/2020

Go To Preceding Article     Go To Next Article

Return to This PA Environment Digest's Main Page