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November 2007, Week 4

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Subject:
Loess Hills article
From:
Jim H Clark <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Jim H Clark <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Fri, 23 Nov 2007 12:13:59 -0600
Content-Type:
text/plain
Parts/Attachments:
text/plain (216 lines)
Thanks to Bill Zales and his family for protecting prairie in the Loess 
Hills.
Forwarded by Jane Clarkl

Zales says it takes a county to preserve a prairie

Monday, November 12, 2007
By Magdalene Biesanz, Le Mars Daily Sentinel

Iowa once was blanketed in prairie.

Rolling grassland covered 90 percent of the state.

Now there's less than one-tenth of a percent left.

Plymouth County resident Bill Zales has a dream: that we hold on to the 
little bit of virgin prairie we have left.

Zales owns 300 acres in the Loess Hills of western Plymouth County -- about 
75 percent of that he calls "quality prairie" -- and he's signed an easement 
that will keep it as native prairie forever.

His vision is to make that option viable for other landowners in the county.

A retired botany and ecology professor from Illinois, Zales had family ties 
to the Loess Hills area and when he heard some of the land was up for sale 
in the 80s, he jumped on the opportunity. He bought 160 acres of hilly 
prairie and sold the easement on his land to the Nature Conservancy, meaning 
that he maintains ownership of it, but he's sold the right to develop it, so 
it will forever remain prairie.

"Most counties in Iowa have zero prairie," he said. "Most of the remaining 
prairie in the state is in the Loess Hills. The rest of Iowa is looking to 
us."

Plymouth County, he said, contains about 11 percent of the Loess Hills 
landform. The hills make up about 13 percent of the county, he added, and 
they're not prime cropland or the best pastureland.
Zales is quick to say he's not anti-agriculture.

"Iowa is an agricultural state, and I benefit from that," he said. "It's 
just that agriculture has 99.9 percent of the state. Can't we save the last 
piece? It just happens that here in Plymouth County we have the last 
remaining prairie in the state."

Now Zales owns 300 acres of hilly prairie. And while prairies by their 
nature maintain themselves, Zales says owning a native prairie can involve 
some work. Every year he does controlled burns on pieces of it, with the 
help of groups like the Nature Conservancy and Plymouth County Conservation. 
For people starting fresh in prairie preservation, there's help out there to 
help do these burns and learn how they work.

This fall, Zales even combined his prairie for the native grass seeds. He 
donates them right now -- some of his seeds are going to revitalize prairie 
at Ponca State Park in Nebraska -- but he says there's a market out there 
for them, too.

His combine is an old International 403 combine with a 15-foot head like 
you'd see for combining soybeans.

"In the 1970s when it was new, it was the Cadillac of combines," he laughed.

It's gone through a few modifications to make it native-seed ready: there's 
less fan to blow away chaff, since that would just blow away the seeds, and 
the sifting screen is finer mesh.

An avid bowman, Zales also uses his property for hunting.

While his land situation is currently rather unique in the county, Zales 
doesn't want it to stay that way. But to get from here to there requires a 
bit of a shift in the way people look at land.

"Landowners in Plymouth County have all kind of options and all kinds of 
money available for management of their land," Zales said, pointing to cost 
shares or funds for terracing land, adding grass waterways, or putting land 
in the Conservation Reserve Program. "What if someone has land and would 
like to protect it? What option do they have?"

Right now, what eventually happens for landowners, he said, is that someone 
comes by with enough money and buys a couple acres on top of the hill.

"Everybody wants the little bit of land with the best view," he said.

Most landowners he's talked to, though, would rather not parcel off their 
land for small acreages, but when it comes down to it, that's just the best 
financial option.

There's money out there for prairie preservation, Zales said. It's just 
spread out among different groups: the NRCS, the state (in REAP funds), 
Pheasants Forever, the Nature Conservancy, Ducks Unlimited, and others.

"Partnering is the big word here," he said. "We've got to get everybody in 
the same room at the same time. We're not inventing anything new. Other 
states, other counties are doing this."

There just needs to be a central coordinator, he said. His suggestion: 
county conservation.

"We need to get a committee or an employee, a full-time contact person," he 
said.

In his vision, that person would be available for someone looking to sell 
their land, or sell the easement on their land, and would guide them through 
the process, helping them find the tax breaks and bringing funding sources 
together to make it a feasible -- and desirable -- option for the landowner.

"I'm saying, 'Plymouth County, you've got to make the move,'" Zales said.

He listed several options to preserve native prairie.

*Number one: Landowners can give away their land. It might sound crazy, but 
Zales said for some, the tax benefits from donating their land might put 
them in a better situation than selling it and paying taxes on the sale. The 
sellers can potentially live the rest of their life on the land, then --  
rather than passing land on to their kids -- they can pass on the funds from 
their tax benefits.

*Number two: Landowners can sell the easement on their land. The easement is 
basically the price difference between their land appraised for acreages and 
their land appraised for pastureland. Selling that to a private or public 
group is basically selling the development rights for the land permanently.

*Number three: Landowners can donate the easement. Once again, the tax 
breaks from donating are the payoff. Landowners who donate or sell their 
easement can still use their land to pasture cattle, bale hay and take trees 
for lumber. They cannot, however, plow it up or raise crops on it. That, 
Zales said, can be a hard sell when corn is $4 a bushel.

*Number four: Landowners can sell their land. Here's where partnering among 
organizations to give landowners a good price for their land comes in, Zales 
said.

*Number five: A governing body can use eminent domain to set aside land as a 
preserve. This, Zales said, is one way to get everyone angry fast. "If you 
want to start a firestorm," he said, "you say, 'Here's your money, now get 
off."

*Number six: Landowners can give groups like Plymouth County Conservation 
the first right to refusal on their property if they ever sell it.

As a botanist and ecologist, Zales sees preserving the prairie as an end in 
itself. Even while he was still a professor at Joliet Junior College in 
Illinois, he would get the college to send classes to the Loess Hills with 
him to study its complexities.

Seeing some of those complexities slowly disappear also motivates Zales and 
others to work for preservation.

"There used to be spotted skunk here, jackrabbits. They're not here 
anymore," Zales said.

Another part of the picture is purely aesthetics.

"We have people driving through the hills, stopping, saying, 'Isn't this 
beautiful?' Isn't there value in that?" he asked. "We have museums full of 
art, the human animal appreciates beautiful things. Out here, the seasons 
change, the colors. This is the most beautiful part of Iowa."

He compared asking "Why preserve prairie?" to "Why pay money to store 
treasures at a museum?"

"The prairie is older than any antique we have," he pointed out.

And prairies, in their abundance of species, could hold scientific secrets 
that will unlock doors in the future, said Zales, who has his doctorate in 
botany.

"We're designing microbes to kill insects. We're looking for genes to put in 
plants to make them grow better," he said. "Now, we may be creating a 
monster, but if we're looking for genes, should we look in a cornfield where 
there's one species or in a prairie where there are thousands?"

And agricultural scientists are paying attention to the way a prairie 
thrives.

"Monoculture -- like a cornfield -- is hard to maintain, but polyculture 
takes care of itself," he said. "We need to start modeling that. And where 
do you go to study polyculture? The prairie."

Zales admits that preserving the land as virgin prairie is not a vision 
everyone shares. That's the way it is, he said. This is America, and private 
ownership rights are king.

But he'd like to debunk a few myths, too.

"There's a lot of misinformation out there," he notes.

Some people say by selling the easement on land or donating or selling the 
land to stay as prairie is "locking up" the land, he said.

"But as private land, wasn't it already 'locked up'?" he asked.

Others argue that prairies are a breeding ground for grasshoppers and other 
pests. But he argues that there are more grasshoppers in a beanfield than 
prairie land.

"In my prairie there are spiders, snakes and birds -- predators," he said. 
"The prairie really is a brutal place."

Preserving the prairie means a shift in how people think of land, Zales 
said. And it means working together as a county.

There are people in the area who share his vision, he suggested, people 
willing to sell or donate the land or the easement if that was a good option 
financially.

"We've got to start," he said. "I think we can accomplish something with 
what little we have left in Plymouth County." 

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