"The little tracts of wilderness grow on Maple Edge Farm in southwest Iowa, where the Bakehouse family cultivates 700 acres of corn, soybeans and alfalfa. Set against uniform rows of cropland, the scraps of land look like tiny Edens, colorful and frowzy. Purple bergamot and yellow coneflowers sway alongside big bluestem and other grasses, alive with birdsong and bees.The Bakehouses planted the strips of wild land after floodwaters reduced many fields to moonscapes three years ago, prompting the family to embark on a once-unthinkable path.They took nearly 11 acres of their fields out of crop production, fragments of farmland that ran alongside fields and in gullies. Instead of crops, they sowed native flowering plants and grasses, all species that once filled the prairie.The restored swaths of land are called prairie strips, and they are part of a growing movement to reduce the environmental harms of farming and help draw down greenhouse gas emissions, while giving fauna a much-needed boost and helping to restore the land...Researchers counted 586 acres of prairie strips on farmland across seven states in 2019. As of last year, they had spread to 14 states, filling 22,972 acres.While the acreage accounts for a tiny fraction of the Midwest’s farm fields — Iowa alone has roughly 30 million acres of cropland — researchers said the strips had disproportionately positive impacts...Soil erosion and surface runoff plummeted, as the prairie plants held soil in place and transpired water. Levels of nitrogen and phosphorus carried in surface runoff from adjacent cropland decreased by as much as 70 percent, absorbed instead by the prairie strips, resulting in less water contamination. The prairie strips created better conditions for helpful bacteria, resulting in dramatically lower levels of nitrous oxide, a powerful greenhouse gas generated by chemical fertilizer, compared to cropland without prairie strips. The strips also drew twice as many native grassland birds and three times as many beneficial insects, compared to fields that had not been rewilded...In late 2018, the prairie strips initiative got perhaps its biggest boost when it was included in the federal Conservation Reserve Program. That meant that farmland owners who converted some of their acreage to prairie strips could collect money from the federal government. According to the Agriculture Department, the average payout for prairie strips is $209 per acre each year...Still, federal payments for prairie strips can end up being less than revenue from livestock or crops. An analysis from Iowa State University found that even with government help, prairie strips generally cost farmers around $64 an acre a year, because of factors such as cost of conversion and taxes..."
Embedded image cropped for size from the original at The New York Times.
When we moved to IA circa Y2K there was ready money for draining and sending top soils more quickly, efficiently to the Gulf, which also seemed to add more tillable acres to every farm. Now we're paying to take those acres out of production. How many other professions/trades does one get paid to employ and not employ destructive methods?
ReplyDeleteFarmers have always (and everywhere) tried to maximize their usage of the land. But back in my grandparent's day, one field was allotted for use as a "hayfield" for cattle pasturage (and probably was rotated with corn/soybeans etc). That hayfield was effectively prairie. Nowadays with the cattle fed indoors on silage and feed, the fields go to cash crops. I'm personally sorry to see the change.
DeleteThat seems to happen naturally in New England - all those stone piles and gullies and steep banks that you see in fields are not sown or hayed; they become strips of brush and trees.
ReplyDeleteIf you've ever seen video, but believe me better in person, livestock being let out to pasture in the spring, you couldn't help condemn cooping them up year round.
ReplyDeletexoxoxoBruce
I blogged this 11 years ago -
Deletehttps://tywkiwdbi.blogspot.com/2013/03/a-video-that-is-emblematic-of-spring.html
Maybe now, with these prairie strips, vegans will be able to honestly say that no animals are harmed for their food.
ReplyDeleteI draw a picture of a large and loud combine harvester chasing terrified small animals out of their home.
You can draw a picture of those animals getting caught in the blades, if you like.
Prairie strips ... what a great idea, said the animals and the BEES !