In response to an earlier message about Sierra Club needing to be a positive 
force, not just against actions of others, I want to point out that Sierra 
Club was part of a large number of conservation groups joined in the effort 
to urge Gov. Culver to take action.
Jane Clark

This is the list of organizations that sent a letter to Gov. Culver about 
protecting Iowa prairies:
American Prairie Foundation

Audubon Society

Center for Rural Affairs

Conservation Districts of Iowa

Delta Waterfowl

Ducks Unlimited

Iowa Cattlemen's Association

Iowa Environmental Council

Iowa Farmers Union

Iowa Wildlife Federation

Izaak Walton League of America

Izaak Walton League - Iowa Division

Izaak Walton League - Mahaska County

National Catholic Rural Life Conference

National Wildlife Federation

The Nature Conservancy

Pheasants Forever

Practical Farmers of Iowa

Quail Forever

Quail Unlimited

Sierra Club, Iowa Chapter

Sustainable Agriculture Coalition

Trout Unlimited

Trout Unlimited Driftless Area Restoration Effort (DARE)

Waterfowl Association of Iowa

World Wildlife Fund


And this is a recent news release from Ducks Unlimited:


http://www.ducks.org/news/1769/Sodsaverrepresentsmi.html

Sodsaver represents missed opportunity to save tax dollars, protect native 
prairie

Washington, D.C. - Feb. 16, 2009 - This past weekend symbolized a missed 
opportunity for waterfowl, wildlife and taxpayers when the deadline to opt 
in to Sodsaver passed. Governors of North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana, 
Minnesota and Iowa declined to participate in the provision of the 2008 Farm 
Bill, which would remove incentives to cultivate native prairie.


"Native prairie is one of our most fragile ecosystems, and we need to ensure 
that it is not lost forever," said Don Young, executive vice president of 
Ducks Unlimited. "While we are disappointed that this opportunity to promote 
healthy land stewardship has passed, we are hopeful that this can be the 
beginning of a new discussion about protecting our last remaining native 
prairie habitats."

Ducks Unlimited biologists have estimated that more than 3.3 million acres 
of native prairie could be lost during the next five years without 
Sodsaver - the equivalent of 15 percent of the remaining 22 million acres. 
Native prairie conversions will ultimately reduce fall waterfowl migrations 
across North America.


The economic ripple effect of losing native prairie is in the hundreds of 
millions of dollars. The non-partisan Government Accountability Office 
estimates that losing native prairie will cost taxpayers more than $119 
million. In addition, with the decrease in ducks from the migration, part of 
the $1.3 billion that migratory bird hunters contribute to rural economies 
across the nation will be lost.

Most of the remaining large tracts of native prairie in the United States 
are found in the five states involved in the Sodsaver provision, in a region 
full of glacially formed shallow ponds called "prairie potholes." The lands 
around these ponds are generally arid and rocky, and are very well suited to 
grazing livestock versus row crops like corn or wheat.


While the land is relatively poor for intensive agricultural production, it 
is ideally suited for nesting and breeding waterfowl. Millions of ducks are 
reared in the Prairie Pothole Region, and migrate to places like the 
Chesapeake Bay, Louisiana Coast and California's Central Valley.

"Bringing these marginal croplands into production is wasteful and damaging 
to important natural resources," said Dr. Scott Stephens, director of 
conservation programs for Ducks Unlimited. "These areas are prone to 
disasters like droughts, and allowing crop subsidies on broken prairie 
creates a burden on taxpayers."


Ducks Unlimited and many other groups strongly supported a Sodsaver program 
that was national in scope during the debate of the 2008 Farm Bill. While 
grassland conversion is a nationwide problem and nationwide proposals were 
considered, the final provision was limited to the Prairie Pothole portion 
of the five states.

"While the door has closed on this opportunity to protect the prairies, we 
are working with members of Congress and the Administration to come up with 
solutions that will ensure the prairies are not lost," said Young. "These 
habitats represent some of the most productive waterfowl breeding areas in 
North America and we will continue to work to secure their long-term 
existence."


With more than a million supporters, Ducks Unlimited is the world's largest 
and most effective wetland and waterfowl conservation organization with more 
than 12 million acres conserved. The United States alone has lost more than 
half of its original wetlands - nature's most productive ecosystem - and 
continues to lose more than 80,000 wetland acres important to waterfowl each 
year.

Neil Shader
[log in to unmask]
202.347.1530

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