National Park Service National Park Service

Acadia National Park Resource Management

 

Land Resources Program

Acadia National Park land resources
 
 

Acadia National Park is one of the few national parks created virtually entirely of donated lands to the federal government. In addition, Congress gave the National Park Service the responsibility to hold conservation easements on private property within the Acadian archipelago. The park’s lands program is charged with keeping records of these properties, marking and monitoring park boundaries, and working together with interested landowners to protect the ecological, cultural, and scenic values of their holdings. Specific components of the lands program include:

Conservation Easements: The National Park Service at Acadia National Park currently holds conservation easements on 184 properties in 18 towns. All easements but one are on islands. These conservation easements protect over 12,000 acres of land. Ongoing activities include:

  • Evaluating properties offered to the National Park Service as potential conservation easements.
  • Working with landowners interested in establishing conservation easements to devise appropriate strategies to protect their properties.
  • Monitoring properties held by the National Park Service to insure compliance with the terms of their conservation easement.
  • Resolving conflicts on conservation easement properties that are held by the National Park Service

Boundary Management: Acadia National Park has approximately 120 miles of boundary, not all of which are marked or surveyed. Ongoing activities include:

  • Monitoring development on lands adjacent to the park to ensure that activities on private property do not encroach on or damage park resources.
  • Clearing, marking, and surveying park boundaries.
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Author: Bill Gawley
Last modified on: September 22, 2004
www.nps.gov/acad/rm/landprog.htm