St. Marks Mitigation Bank project
Mitigation Bank

St. Marks Mitigation Bank

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Wetland Mitigation

The 1450-acre wetland site straddles the Jefferson and Wakulla County lines in an ideal location adjacent to a vast assemblage of conservation lands alongside the St. Marks and Aucilla River drainages.

Substantial portions of the mitigation bank site include areas identified as potential rare species habitat. Specifically, documented plant and animal occurrences within a 6-mile radius of the bank include: Florida Black Bear, Suwannee Cooter, Alligator Snapping Turtle, Spotted Turtle, Bald Eagle, One-toed Amphiuma, Eastern Indigo Snake, White-flowered Wild Petunia, Incised Groove-bur, Chapman’s Sedge, Curtiss’ Sandgrass, Corkwood, Beaked Spikerush, Godfrey’s Spider lily, and Thorne’s Beakrush. In addition, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has recently listed the area as critical habitat for the frosted flatwoods salamander. Several areas of known breeding ponds or observed adults have been documented within a 5-mile radius of the bank location.

Location:

Wakulla County, FL

Credit Types:

Palustrine Forested Emergent Credits Cypress/Mixed Forest Credits Wet Prairie/Flatwoods Credits

Acres:

1,468

Approving Agencies:

Florida Department of Environmental Protection, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service

Service Area and Credits

Service Area

The service area for the St. Marks Mitigation Bank includes St. Marks River Basin, including portions of Wakulla, Jefferson, and Leon Counties.

Credits

WES wants to answer all your questions related to compensatory mitigation. Whether you have issues related to service areas, credit types, ratios, or agency approvals- we are here to help.

Have questions about the service area or purchasing mitigation credits?

Please contact our sales team for additional information.



Rare Threatened Species at St. Marks Mitigation Bank

The frosted flatwoods salamander (Ambystoma cingulatum) is making a comeback at WES’s St. Marks Mitigation Bank. Winter surveys conducted by the Amphibian and Reptile Conservancy (ARC) found three larvae in January 2024. Both WES and ARC celebrated as ARC’s find marked the first known occurrence on private land within its Florida range in multiple decades.

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Rare Threatened Species at St. Marks Mitigation Bank

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