An ornate box turtle named Cuatro, age 60ish. |
The 510-acre preserve is not open to the public save for a “field
day” every three years, though a group of Iowa Master Naturalists were recently
treated to a tour to learn about some of the species that are being monitored
in the preserve, including the western hognose snake and the yellow mud turtle,
as well as ornate box turtles.
With Iowa’s status as one of the most transformed states in
the nation, it’s fortunate that this land was preserved from development. Much
of the land that became Big Sand Mound Preserve was originally owned by
MidAmerican Energy, which set it aside to be protected in the late 1970s after
learning about its ecological significance (Bayer added another 90 acres a few
years later). Since then it has been a researcher’s delight, a small scrap of what
once was and will never be again, requiring significant resources to manage and
maintain.
The preserve's benefactors loom large in the landscape. |
Imagine the fate of this unique ecosystem if not for the
beneficence of two companies with the foresight and resources to protect it
almost 50 years ago, and the countless hours that have been spent studying and
maintaining it.
Now imagine how many unique ecosystems have been lost in the
few hundred years since our state was turned over to agriculture. Imagine the streams
that once teemed with trout that have been lost to pollution from animal
confinements, or the diverse prairie that contained thousands of species,
plowed up and replaced with a single cultivated type of corn or soybeans. The
natural world is a treasure, something we don’t even have the capacity to put a
price tag on because each remnant is irreplaceable.
Near the Greenway here in town is another sand prairie, a small remnant off South Gilbert Street. Without a benevolent corporate sponsor, the area surrounding it was developed and replaced with a housing subdivision, displacing more than 50 ornate box turtles. Local activists were able to protect just 38 acres of this unique ecosystem, which unfortunately is much degraded due to encroaching brush and lack of resources for the intensive management that would be required to restore and maintain it. If only ornate box turtles had property rights.
Identified as a Tile-Horned Longhorn Beetle |
One of two western hognose snakes, getting its stats recorded. |
Flags are used to mark turtle nesting spots. |
A flock of pelicans pass overhead. |
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