A New Model: Prairie Restoration on Private Land
Introducing the Southern Plains Land Trust (SPLT), a group that recognizes
the immense and immediate need to save the natural, shortgrass prairie
ecosystem. Angered by the refusal of our public lands managers to adequately
protect native prairie wildlife; frustrated by the destruction of thriving
prairie by agriculture and development; and heartbroken over the continued
poisoning, bulldozing and shooting of black-tailed prairie dogs; we joined
together to prevent the total annihilation of the once richly diverse shortgrass
prairie. Our purpose is simple and direct: establish a network of shortgrass
prairie reserves in the Southern Plains and promote respect for the prairie
dog ecosystem.
SPLT envisions an entirely new type of ecosystem restoration project,
one that seeks to obtain reform on public lands alongside private land
acquisition. This approach is the best hope for preserving a permanent,
native prairie community.
Decline of the Shortgrass Prairie
Once the prairie was teeming with life. The "Serengeti" of North America
is how the Great Plains were depicted before the rush to colonize, control,
and modity the land by humans. Bison once roamed free, grazing vast
grassy expanses to create an environment that prairie dogs like best: short-clipped
vegetation enabling maximum viewing of would-be predators. Prairie dogs
followed bison herds to colonize the newly "mowed" areas, bringing along
a host of other species. The shortgrass region from Canada through northern
Mexico was abuzz with wildlife rarely or never seen today black-footed
ferrets, swift fox, mountain plover, ferruginous hawks, grizzly bears,
wolves, elk, and bald eagles. Each species from the largest predators to
the tiniest insects played an important role in this sustainable system,
with the black-tailed prairie dog at the center: the keystone.
In less than 100 years, human settlers have nearly obliterated our Serengeti.
Due to the perceived suitability of grasslands for monocrop agriculture,
the prairies of North America fell victim to the plow. The forces of cattle
ranching, prairie dog shooting, and municipal development combined to cause
a severe state of biological imperilment. It took the U.S. Army and hunters
just two decades to whittle a population of 60 million bison down to less
than 1,000 by 1883. At the turn of the century, prairie dogs inhabited
up to 700 million acres of the Great Plains. We reduced this down to less
than 800,000 acres. The Southern Plains are now devoid of large, healthy
black-tailed prairie dog complexes. Our campaigns to exterminate the prairie
dog thrust the black-footed ferret to near extinction. Seven Great Plains
species are already gone. Many more face a similar fate if we do not act
now. Because of the high demand for beef and other food products provided
by prairie agriculture, we all share the blame for the current crisis.
Scientists believe that grasslands are the most endangered ecosystems
in the world. Fifty-five grassland species are already listed as endangered
or threatened under the Endangered Species Act, and 728 are candidates
for listing. Two petitions to list the black-tailed prairie dog as threatened
are currently being considered by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
The Failure of Public Lands Policy
We can't depend on our government agencies to develop and implement
a sufficient legal framework that will bring the Plains back to a healthy
condition. Our public land managers have proven that they can't be trusted
as protectors of native wildlife. It is government prairie dog poisoning
programs that, in large part, have beaten the prairie into this badly injured
state. Local, state, and federal agencies continue to poison prairie dogs
on our public lands without hesitation. Shooters take advantage of the
open season on prairie dogs and destroy more imperiled habitat as they
pump bullets into innocent animals. Though our National Grasslands hold
the greatest promise for large scale prairie preservation, the U.S. Forest
Service remains the greatest obstacle to that goal. The Forest Service
allows less than 1% occupancy for prairie dogs on the grasslands.
A Project Based on Sound Science and Ethics
Responding to these dire circumstances, SPLT developed a plan to revitalize
the Southern Plains. We seek to acquire lands near National Grasslands
in southeast Colorado, southwest Kansas, northeast New Mexico, and the
Oklahoma panhandle while simultaneously promoting grasslands policy reform.
The aim is creating a reserve network to reestablish the natural mosaic
of prairie dog colonies inherent to the shortgrass plains.
The SPLT reserve shall be allowed to flourish with minimal human intervention.
Initially this may mean reseeding, burning, and mowing to restore native
prairie vegetation. The reintroduction of other naturally occurring members
of the prairie dog ecosystem may also be necessary. In addition, we will
work to restore the American bison on the reserve and adjacent National
Grasslands as wildlife, not livestock. However, the idea is to allow the
prairie to heal itself.
Accompanying our land purchases and prairie restoration will be an energetic
dedication to education and outreach to prevent the further decline of
the prairie. We want to develop and present a model for peaceful human
coexistence with native wildlife for the broader Plains community.
One Protected Piece of Native Prairie
SPLT is extremely encouraged by the public support of our first land
purchase campaign. Within two months of launching the effort to acquire
a 1,280 acre parcel in southern Colorado, SPLT was grateful to be able
to purchase the first building block of the network on November 21, 1998.
This is just the beginning.