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Print

Missouri farmers paid to help prairie chickens

December 24, 2008 at 09:27 AM

Associated Press Writer

ST. LOUIS (AP)—Farmland owners in certain Missouri counties can give prairie chickens a boost and earn income in an unsettling economy.

A new state-federal program will pay them to set aside land as habitat and nesting grounds for prairie chickens, which once roamed the state’s prairies in the hundreds of thousands.

With fewer than 400 to 500 birds remaining in Missouri, their existence is tenuous.

“They’re part of our prairie heritage,” said Max Alleger, the state’s prairie chicken recovery leader with the Missouri Department of Conservation. “They represent the native prairie that once covered a third of Missouri.”

Prairie chickens, historic residents of Missouri grasslands, are being managed for expansion in parts of the state. But their need for safe nesting sites and room to roam led to a joint effort by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and Missouri Department of Conservation to create new habitat from cropland.

A long-s tanding USDA program that pays farmers not to plant crops on lands that are highly erodible or that could serve as a buffer for streams or as wildlife habitat now includes prairie chicken restoration efforts as a goal in Missouri and elsewhere.

The government payments, over a 15-year contract, would come just as farmers struggle to get operating loans for next spring’s planting, said Joe Horner, a University of Missouri Extension economist.

“With all the banks tightening up on credit, this is an opportunity for some people to rent some of their worst (land) in exchange for a nice solid income,” Horner said.

The program is limited to specific areas in 11 Missouri counties where prairie chickens are being encouraged: Adair, Benton, Barton, Dade, Harrison, Jasper, Lawrence, Pettis, St. Clair, Sullivan and Vernon.

Farmland owners must pledge a minimum of 20 well-drained, upland acres that provide an open landscape. Some help may be available to remove tre es more than 10 feet tall. Payments are calculated on a FSA formula.

Iowa, New Mexico, and Texas are among the states making similar offers to their farmers to reverse the decline in prairie chicken habitat, according to the USDA’s Farm Service Agency.

It comes through a 2007 program known as SAFE, or state acres for wildlife enhancement.

Signups are through local USDA Farm Service Agency offices.

Alleger said lack of suitable ground cover for nesting females is the one thing that most limits the proliferation of the prairie chicken in Missouri.

The ideal nesting area would have native prairie grasses between 6 and 17 inches tall, so any land set aside for the chickens would have to be grazed or high-mowed periodically.

The habitat also would benefit bobwhite quail, and such migratory birds as the grasshopper sparrow, Henslow sparrow, and upland sandpiper.

Prairie chickens are solitary birds except when they come together to socializ e and mate on “booming grounds” in March and April.

A bred female then seeks out a nest and hatches a clutch in the third week of June.

The mating grounds take their name from the low, mournful booming sound that courting males emit from sacks on their neck that force out air.

The springtime courtship rituals draw visitors each year to Dunn Ranch in northwest Missouri’s Harrison County where activity is viewed from the cover of a blind.

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