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Goats & Sheep Help With Highway Construction

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Goats & Sheep Help With Highway Construction

HAMPSTEAD, Md. (WJZ) ― Sometimes the best solutions are the simplest.  That's what Maryland's Highway Administration is hoping, anyway.  Alex DeMetrick reports in order to build a highway bypass around an endangered turtle, the state is counting on goats and sheep for help.

One small herd of sheep and goats aren't on any farm.  Instead, they're living just off a new Route 30 bypass in Hampstead, where road work is nearly done, but their work is just beginning--if you call eating work.  But it's exactly what's needed to get federal money for the new road.

"We have to comply with federal requirements in order to get those funds and there are a lot of environmental hoops we need to jump through," said SHA Environmental Analyst Bill Branch.

The number one hurdle turned out to be a turtle, specifically a bog turtle.  Biologists look for them in swampy areas and they are a rare find, so much so that they are an endangered species.  That was enough to force the bypass to move around the turtles.

But to build it, their habitat must still be improved, so the state is turning to goats and sheep to eat back invasive plants.

Nearly 10 years ago, on an overgrown insland in the Pocomoke River, goats were brought in as a low-cost, natural weed control but this is the first time they've worked for state highways.

The goats and sheep will graze until August, when they will return to their farm.  If needed for more weeding, they will be brought back next spring.

(© MMIX, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.)

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