Indiangrass is prominent in the tallgrass prairie ecosystem. According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), it provides ground cover and nesting areas for gamebirds and songbirds, year-round cover for white-tailed deer and nesting material for native bees.
Beauty and Color(Image 2 of 8)
Butterfly milkweed flowers add a splash of color to the prairie. This vibrant plant boasts a number of medicinal uses and has been used historically by several indigenous groups to treat a variety of ailments. According to the USDA, the Omaha-Ponca people of Nebraska and Iowa ate the raw root to treat bronchial and pulmonary woes. It is also used to treat diarrhea and relieve sore throats, among other things.
Milkweed in Seed(Image 3 of 8)
A seed from a butterfly milkweed plant prepares to take to the wind on its tuft of long, silky white hairs. The seeds emerge from ripened pods, and their wispy hairs help set them afloat in the breeze to reseed in another location. While in bloom, butterfly milkweed serves as an important stop for pollinators such as monarch butterflies.
Hoverfly(Image 4 of 8)
This tiny hoverfly feeds exclusively on nectar and pollen, making it an important prairie pollinator. Helzer identified 22 species of flies during his project.
Prairie Monarch(Image 5 of 8)
Each year, North America’s monarch butterflies travel between their northern summer breeding grounds to the refuge of warmer southern locations like Mexico. Along the way, prairies provide important stopover habitat where they can rest and drink nectar that will aid them during the remainder of their journey.
Jumping Spider(Image 6 of 8)
This jumping spider was one of seven spider species Helzer photographed. Spiders are important members of balanced prairie ecosystems, serving as tiny predators that eat a variety of insects including grasshoppers, crickets, moths, flies and beetles.
Mining Bee on Leadplant(Image 7 of 8)
The leadplant is another important component of a prairie ecosystem, helping to fight against erosion and providing nutrition for grazing animals. It also powers this mining bee, Andrena quintilis, which feeds exclusively on its nectar.
Bumblebee on Sunflower(Image 8 of 8)
Prairie is threatened by residential, commercial and agricultural development, which can all fragment the ecosystems that help sustain important pollinators like the common eastern bumblebee, seen here feeding on a Maximilian sunflower.
April 30, 2019 —
Prairie grasslands are considered North America’s most endangered ecosystem. Chris Helzer, The Nature Conservancy’s (TNC) Nebraska director of science, says they suffer from an image problem. And he’s out to fix that with, well, images.
“What most people see is just a bunch of boring grass,” Helzer says. This viewpoint breeds disinterest and hinders those who are working to preserve prairie, he says.
According to Helzer, that “boring grass” offers plenty of benefits to people, such as clean water. Prairies also provide habitat to a number of species, including many pollinators. And they can store carbon in more long-term ways than forests, thereby helping to mitigate climate change.
Helzer embarked on his year-long Square Meter Photography Project in 2018 to highlight the beauty of prairies, from the aesthetic power of a huge landscape to their small-scale complexity. The project, which aims to draw awareness and appreciation to this ecosystem, is set within a single square meter of Lincoln Creek Prairie in Aurora, Nebraska.
Over the course of a year, Helzer snapped hundreds of photos, capturing 113 species including 15 plants, 22 flies, 18 beetles, 14 bees and one vertebrate (a frog).
“It’s never the same prairie twice,” Helzer says of the project. “It’s like checking your favorite TV show.” He notes that he was surprised by the level of emotion and inspiration he felt during his endeavor. “I didn’t expect to be as blown away as I was.”
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Prairie ecosystems historically covered 170 million acres (70 million hectares) of North America; today, native prairies are in danger of disappearing altogether. According to a 2018 U.S. Geological Survey report, 95% of historic acreage of tallgrass prairie has been destroyed or altered by humans, while 70% to 90% of mixed-grass prairie has vanished.
Their biggest threat? Residential, commercial and agricultural development, Helzer says. When large, expansive prairie landscapes are split into tiny parcels to accommodate development, it divides and isolates animal and plant populations, making them more susceptible to threats such as disease. According to Helzer, fragmented prairie is also more vulnerable to invasion by trees and woody landscapes.
One prairie conservation tactic used by organizations like TNC is buying existing prairie and converting it into nature preserves. Another method is funding conservation easements, which encourage landowners to manage tracts of prairie privately.
However, both approaches are expensive and limited in scope, Helzer says. Additionally, he adds, the sole existence of a conservation easement does not ensure its proper management into the future. Long-term conservation requires working with landowners to help them find ways to make money off of their prairie habitats while at the same time encouraging them to share knowledge with future generations, he says.
Although the photo project can’t do the conservation work itself, Helzer hopes his snapshots will inspire appreciation and concern for this endangered ecosystem. Even if people don’t visit, he says, “If they feel like they got to know something, they may care.”
The way to atmospheric carbon level mitigation and reversal needs to certainly arise from the congeries of many renewable energy and land use practice. More fundamentally as well, it will require the retirement of parochial ownership and investment concepts and a shift to broader community and even planetary stewardship accountabilities. Many pre- and non-industrial patterns provide suggestive insight for adaptive future alternatives to what is now dominant and irreparably harmful.
CGMay. 3rd, 2019
We know important it is to protect our prairies, wildlife and rural communities! The Great Plains are being industrialized at an alarming rate due to #greenwashing and #subsidyscams targeting some of the largest land owners in America! They are crushing tiles, clear cutting, invading nesting areas, slaughtering avian fauna and so much more! Wind Energy Officials have been caught saying in County Commission meetings that they never claimed Wind Energy to be green~ that was something the National Media came up with! Intermittent Energy is not a renewable or sustainable solution so why are we allowing it to litter our vast prairies with scrap metal, cement, fiberglass... things that will never be removed during decommission! (They leave tons of cement in the earth)! Erosion is one of the greatest threats facing our Great Plains~ why are we closing our eyes or turning our back on threat sustainable solutions! I’ve attended Planning and Zoning Meetings were local board members are notified of nesting spots for Bald Eagles, Endangered Bats, prairie chickens and so forth, along with pointing out migration paths and local ponds, lakes and rivers where avian fauna stop and rest... only to be told who cares by Gov officials and Wind Companies. We’ve counted the dead beneath turbines that are never included in their falsified reports that present to the general public! It’s sickening what we are allowing to happen to our wild spaces all in the name of Climate Change! Theodore Roosevelt and John Muir are turning in their graves! There is no such thing as clean energy! Personal accountability~ reducing our own individual carbon footprint is mandatory! I’ve lived green for 37 years (God Bless my parents)! We were green before Gore freaked everyone out with bad science! Stop holding our wildspaces hostage because you can’t do the right thing! Simplify your life, Minimalize your living, reduce your consumption, decrease your travel, eat more vegetables... the list goes on! The only person that will lease or profit from my land is Mother Nature!
David HMay. 7th, 2019
saving the native grasslands with all the perennial grasses and plants is vary necessary for many reasons. One is we may a new plant for food and forage.
Louis RielJul. 7th, 2020
Time to give these stolen lands back to Indigenous peoples to better manage the ecosystem and bring back biodiversity.
Don TaylorNov. 29th, 2020
Would like to plant prairie in a 2 acre part of my lawn in southeastern Virginia. Any help finding seeds and any advice on planting and long term care would be appreciated.
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