The environment is NOT expendable. However, wetlands are filled in, the rainforest is cut down and species, plant and animal alike, go extinct everyday. I don't want my grandchildren to have to go to the zoo to see a tree or a frog. EarthMark (Earth Mike's Ark) International is my attempt to preserve these wonders and just maybe restore a little piece of the Earth.
Sunday, November 05, 2006
How You Can Help
Wetlands are among the most productive habitats on earth providing shelter and nursery areas for commercially and recreationally important animals like fish and shellfish, as well as wintering grounds for migrating birds. Louisiana contains 40 percent of the coastal wetlands in the lower 48 States and for the last 50 years has lost an average of 34 square miles a year. The 2005 hurricane season greatly intensified this loss. The change from land to water in all of coastal Louisiana from 2004 to 2005 was 118.2 square miles, almost 25% of the land loss projected to occur over a period of 50 years (2000 - 2050) by the Louisiana Coastal Area Ecosystem Restoration Study.
EarthMark Int. is working with academic universities to replant marsh and wetland areas from the Louisiana Gulf Coast to the Florida Everglades. For $15.00, a tree (cypress, water oak, button brush, etc.) can be produced in a nursery, shipped to a project location and planted in a restoration project. You can help. Whether your donation is enough for a tree or a whole forest, you can do your part to protect and reclaim this vital piece of our environment.
Every cent of every donation goes directly to producing a tree.
If you would like, you can donate now.
Cypress seedlings in an EarthMark nursery greenhouse.
EarthMark International Plants, Inc, EMIP, utilizes a unique process that has proven to accelerate growth and early fruiting of most plants. The air-pruning process has had impressive initial results accelerating growth and improving survival of many species of trees. This air-pruning process, with the help of an organic plant supplement, increases overall hardiness and accelerates the growth of processed trees.
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