Friday, January 31, 2014

"Kobach urges passage of bill that would exclude Lesser Prairie Chicken from federal protection"

Kansas Secretary of State, Kris Kobach, supports a state bill (Kansas Senate Bill 276) that would prevent the US Fish & Wildlife Service from protecting imperiled nonmigratory wildlife species or their habitats in Kansas. The Cimarron National Grassland in southwest Kansas, a major habitat for the Lesser Prairie Chicken in Kansas, is administered by the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

 The full online version can be seen at

Kobach urges passage of bill that would exclude Lesser Prairie Chicken from federal protection

 "Kansas Secretary of State Kris Kobach on Thursday urged legislators to approve a bill that would exclude the Lesser Prairie Chicken from federal protection.
The bill would assert state sovereignty over nonmigratory wildlife, declare null and void any federal law in Kansas on the Lesser Prairie Chicken, and allow state officials to charge federal officials with a felony if a federal official tried to enforce a federal law dealing with the Lesser Prairie Chicken."

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

Connecting Kids to Nature in the Digital Age


Connecting Kids to Nature in the Digital Age

NWF Report: Friending Fresh Air

So how do parents balance the role of technology in their kids’ lives with the simple pleasures and lasting benefits of outdoor play? Better yet, how do they use technology to get kids moving, exploring and interacting with the outdoor world around them?
            Be Out There takes an in-depth look at how to balance screen time with green time in the report, Friending Fresh Air: Connecting Kids to Nature in the Digital Age. Here, we offer insight on how to use technology you already love and still connect your kids to nature.
            Bridge the Indoor/Outdoor Gap with Tech
1. Use technology to help plan outdoor time or inspire your next outdoor adventure.
2. If they love it, embrace it, and take it outside!
3. Keep a record of your experiences with the help of electronics to take photos, make videos or keep an electronic journal of adventures and discoveries
"Everything in moderation" is a wise old saying that applies to many aspects of our lives. As much as we love chocolate, a diet of cookies and candy bars just doesn't cut it in the nutrition department. Likewise, technology can be a wonderful tool for learning and playing, but kids require a balance of screen and green experiences to grow up happy and healthy. Kids, and even parents, need time to recharge their own batteries, so don’t forget the importance of unplugging completely and enjoying some disconnected connection with nature, too.
Smartphone or not, it’s good for kids to Be Out There!

Sunday, January 19, 2014

Farm bill in trouble


Farm bill in trouble

By David Rogers
Politico

House Agriculture Committee Chairman Frank Lucas conceded Thursday (January 9) that final action on a farm bill conference report is now likely to slip into late January — a major blow to himself and an ominous turn for the bill itself.
The draft package combines a landmark rewrite of commodity programs together with cuts from food stamps to generate in the range of $25 billion in 10-year savings, according to preliminary estimates. These accomplishments remain a strong argument for saving the bill. but the persistent in-fighting and delays are taking their toll and a worry for supporters.
“It need            s to be done as soon as possible but the issues are of such magnitude I can’t go until I get the issues addressed,” Lucas said. The Oklahoma Republican admitted to immense frustration — and some surprise — at the full dimensions of the standoff now between Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) and Lucas’s own ranking Democrat, Minnesota Rep. Collin Peterson, over dairy policy.
 “I don’t know that I understood how just hard the positions were by the two interested parties,” Lucas said in a hallway interview. “No one has shown any flexibility whatsoever.”
The latest farm bill delay — after what has already been a two year struggle — is a challenge to Lucas’s own leadership as chairman.
He is a likable, popular figure, but his critics would argue that he should have seen the crisis coming earlier. Lucas said he is now working on options to broker some compromise but he conceded as chairman, “There comes a point in time here where I have to pick a side and go with it.”
At issue is a new margin insurance initiative for dairy farmers which would include supply management tools to guard against over production. Peterson has argued that the supply controls are vital to keep down the cost of the insurance program. But Boehner believes the increased government role amounts to a bridge-too-far in a world of dairy policy which the speaker is already fond of comparing to the former Soviet Union.
Indeed Boehner sounded this theme again in his weekly press conference on Thursday. “The Soviet-style dairy program we have will continue, but let’s not make it any worse by including supply and management tools,” the speaker said. “I’ve fought off the supply and management ideas for 23 years that I have been in Congress, and my position hasn’t changed, and Mr. Peterson and others are well aware of it.”
Asked directly if he would block the farm bill conference report from coming back to the House floor if it did include the Peterson supply management language, Boehner suggested Lucas would protect him from having to make that decision.
“I am confident that the conference report will not include supply and management provisions for the dairy program,” the speaker said.
Lucas said that in his own conversations with Boehner, the speaker had warned him explicitly. “His statement to me was that if supply management is in it, it’s not coming to the floor. Flat out,” Lucas said.
“If the conference adopts Peterson exclusively, his language on dairy, we might not have a conference report. Where do I go from there?” the chairman said. “By the same token if the conference rejects Peterson, Collin has been a very key player in helping to pull this all together. How will he react? Will he light a match and blow up a stick of political dynamite?”
“I’m trying to work with both factions on any or all options.” Lucas said, but he likened the experience to trying to separate two over-heated bulls in the middle of a pasture.
“They get hot, they get mad and they lose their focus on what’s going on around them,” Lucas said. “You go to separate them, if you are not careful, you get smashed. I’m getting close to getting smashed no matter what happens.”
Peterson lost to Boehner on the supply management issue during the House farm bill debate last summer. But his language has the support of the Senate in its version of the farm bill. And the Minnesota Democrat believes he has the votes in the House-Senate talks now to ultimately prevail.
An important swing vote here is Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Ala.). Rogers is counted as loyal to Lucas but under pressure from dairymen at home to back Peterson if possible. “I get the feel that Rogers’s dairymen want Peterson’s language,” Lucas said, when asked about his own conversation with Rogers this week. “I get the feeling that Rogers wants to be reflective of his dairymen.”
Peterson has long said he would be willing to sunset the supply management tools, once farmers have had a chance to adapt to the new margin insurance program. Processors, who bitterly oppose the proposal, counter that the real flaw is that the premiums charged to farmers would be set under law — and not reflect market forces.
Indeed, unlike most crop insurance — in which the government subsidizes the premiums charged by private companies — the margin insurance would be run through the Farm Service Agency that has a long history with dairy programs. This was done in part to reduce administrative costs and because it is an agency known to dairy farmers. But critics argue that it would be useful to also tap into the experience of a pilot margin insurance program now run through the Risk Management Agency, elsewhere in the Agriculture Department.
Known as LGM Dairy, this initiative remains very modest in scope but the actuarial data collected could serve to help future adjustments in the rates for the larger margin insurance program envisioned in the farm bill. That might help facilitate a faster transition from the supply management tools favored by Peterson to a more market approach favored by Boehner and processors.
“I don’t know that I would word it exactly that way,” Lucas said, “But that would be the net effect of some of the stuff we have been talking about.” 

Monday, January 13, 2014

NRCS Extends Deadline for Conservation Stewardship Program Applications


NRCS Extends Deadline for Conservation Stewardship Program Applications

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA’s) Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) has extended the deadline for new enrollments in the Conservation Stewardship Program (CSP) for fiscal year (FY) 2014. Producers interested in participating in the program can submit applications to NRCS through February 7, 2014.
            “Extending the enrollment deadline will make it possible for more farmers, ranchers and forest landowners to apply for this important Farm Bill conservation program,” NRCS Chief Jason Weller said. “Through their conservation actions, these good stewards are ensuring that their operations are more productive and sustainable over the long run and CSP can help them take their operations to the next level of natural resource management.”
Weller said today's announcement is another example of USDA's comprehensive focus on promoting environmental conservation and strengthening the rural economy, and it is a reminder that a new Food, Farm, and Jobs Bill is pivotal to continue these efforts. CSP is now in its fifth year and so far, NRCS has partnered with producers to enroll more than 59 million acres across the nation.
            The program emphasizes conservation performance—producers earn higher payments for higher performance. In CSP, producers install conservation enhancements to make positive changes in soil quality, soil erosion, water quality, water quantity, air quality, plant resources, animal resources, and energy use.
            Eligible landowners and operators in Kansas can enroll in CSP through February 7, 2014, to be eligible during FY 2014. While local NRCS offices accept the CSP applications year round, NRCS evaluates applications during announced ranking periods. 
            A CSP self-screening checklist is available to help producers determine if the program is suitable for their operation. The checklist highlights basic information about the CSP eligibility requirements, stewardship threshold requirements, and payment types.
            For the checklist and additional information, visit the CSP Web sitehttp://www.nrcs.usda.gov/wps/portal/nrcs/main/national/programs/financial/csp/ or visit your local USDA NRCS office.

Sunday, January 12, 2014

Agricultural drainage leads to environmental concerns


Ag drainage leads to environmental concerns

Julie Buntjer
Prairie Business Magazine

For years, conservationists in Minnesota have been concerned about agricultural drainage of the state's farm lands. Miles upon miles of underground tile have been installed through private lands as a way to remove excess water and improve crop yields. What benefits the farmers, though, has come at a cost to the environment, some say.
“We’re running into more flooding problems because of drain tile,” said Nobles County Soil and Water Conservation District Manager Ed Lenz. “We’re draining agricultural land quicker than it normally would in a natural environment, which results in a much quicker and larger bounce, where the stream comes up quicker for a shorter duration.”
Multiplied by added tile lines and sped up by big rain events, water cuts into stream banks and stream beds, making for wider, deeper channels and eroded soil that ultimately ends up in lakes and rivers.
Last March, the Science Museum of Minnesota and several major universities published a three-year independent study concluding that agricultural drainage is responsible for increased river flows and stream bank erosion, and is a leading cause of excess sediment in lakes and rivers. The study compared changes in water flow for 21 southern Minnesota rivers between 1940 and 2009 and concluded changes in flow were “strongly correlated” with changes in land use. Artificial drainage was also identified as a major driver of increased river flow.
Lenz sees firsthand the problems created as more tile lines are added to the landscape. At the same time, he understands why farmers are apt to install drainage systems. “Tiling is important to our local economy and the farming industry,” he said. “There’s no reason to say that we need to end it, but there are certain practices we could use with the tile that could be beneficial to both the ag industry and the local environment.”
Those practices include installation of terraces, sediment basins or conservation drainage structures that slow water movement. Woodchip bioreactors, which work to remove excess nutrients from water outletting from drainage tile before it enters another water body, are another option.
In Nobles County, Lenz said only a small percentage of farmers implement conservation practices to address water storage. “We will do roughly 40 practices a year,” he said. “Two years ago, our drainage practices hit 600 — that could be to repair a section of tile or to install pattern tile on a quarter-section.”
As more farmers implement pattern tiling or repair existing tile lines, concerns about downstream impacts of drainage aren’t just localized. A statewide drainage work group is now reviewing Minnesota’s drainage laws, from drainage management to flood control and water quality.
“One of the reasons for controlled subsurface drainage is … to hold back some of the water in the soil profile so that water can be used by the crop rather than drain off downstream,” explained Al Kean, chief engineer for Minnesota’s Board of Water and Soil Resources and a member of the work group. “One of the key environmental concerns about tile drainage is transport of soil nitrates. Putting tile in the ground increases the transport of nitrate from the soil profile into downstream waters.”
Dan Livdahl, Okabena-Ocheda Watershed District Administrator, said it has become more apparent that nitrogen transported by agricultural practices is a pollution problem. Excess nitrogen escaping farm fields and getting into lakes, rivers and ultimately into the Mississippi River is blamed for the growing dead zone in the Gulf of Mexico.
Closer to home, Livdahl said higher levels of nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus are fueling more algal blooms. Lake Okabena inWorthington last year had some of the earliest and latest algal blooms recorded, with blue-green hues visible in the lake for much of the summer.
The presence of algae is not only a visual problem — the odors emitted from decaying algae can be likened to rotten eggs. It could also impact aquatic life. “More recent information says nitrate … in particular, is probably harmful to aquatic insects, zooplankton and plankton,” Livdahl said. Those species are at the bottom of the food chain and can affect all life in the aquatic system.
Addressing nutrients
Recently, Soil and Water Conservation Districts, watershed districts and other organizations have helped fund projects in southwestMinnesota to reduce the amount of nutrients leaving farmers’ fields through tile and ending up in drainage ditches, streams and lakes.
The SWCDs in Cottonwood and Jackson counties teamed up to earn a $250,000 Clean Water Partnership grant in 2010 to install nine woodchip bioreactors on tile lines feeding into Fish Lake. Brian Nyborg, Jackson SWCD Manager, said the bioreactors aren’t “cutting-edge” in Minnesota, but are a relatively new option in this part of the state.
The nine bioreactors were placed on all but four of the tile lines that feed into the 300-acre Fish Lake to remove phosphorus and nitrogen from water in the tile lines before it enters the lake. The bioreactors “take hardly any land out of production,” Nyborg said, making them a viable option for farmers.
Bioreactors use woodchips to soak up the phosphorus and nitrogen carried through tile lines. “If the tile is four feet deep, you’d have three feet of woodchips and one foot of soil on top of the woodchips,” Nyborg explained.
Estimates are the bioreactors kept more than 3,800 pounds of nitrogen and 77 pounds of phosphorus out of Fish Lake in one year, though there’s no monitoring data to show improved lake health. The Clean Water Partnership grant didn’t include funds for lake monitoring.
“(Last) summer, there were some complaints that the water quality hadn’t improved,” Nyborg said. “It will take time. You still have that sediment and phosphorus in the lake (prior to installing the bioreactors).” The woodchip bioreactors cost from $4,000 to $8,000 each for theFish Lake project.
Nyborg said he’d like to do more bioreactor projects with willing landowners, and Livdahl wants to get a woodchip bioreactor project started in Nobles County.
“If they’re built and managed well, they’ll remove nitrogen from that tile water before it’s discharged,” Livdahl said. “They also remove dissolved phosphorus … the nutrient that causes the most problem with algae blooms. “If you’ve got pollution coming out of your tile and you can treat that relatively cheap, why wouldn’t you?” he asked.
Controlled drainage structures, which allow farmers to hold back water — as well as nutrients — in the field for the times they are needed for the crop, are another option. SWCDs and watershed districts have worked with willing landowners on these projects in the past, and government funding is available.
Yet, Lenz said, few farmers install the controlled drainage structures here because of the cost. Instead, he deals primarily with terrace and sediment basin requests, along with streambank erosion projects.
Charlie Loosbrock, co-owner of Loo Con Inc., of Wilmont, said farmers are using conservation tillage and terraces to hold water and nutrients on the soil so it’s available to the crops. He contends that paved roads and buildings — any impervious surface — causes more runoff than agricultural land. “Those are what are contributing, in my estimation, to these increased flows in rivers,” Loosbrock said. “It is not the farmland.”
Kean acknowledges that while sediment and nutrients are carried in runoff from those impervious surfaces, the majority comes from agricultural land.
“Larger urban areas, they’ve been doing stormwater ponds, trying to reduce peak flows and settle out sediment and other pollutants for a number of years,” he said. “There’s a lot more agricultural land than urban land.”

Saturday, January 11, 2014

Five Tips for Helping Birds This Winter


Five Tips for Helping Birds This Winter

by Rob Ripma
Garden Club Newsletter

With the sinking temperatures near my home in Indiana, it is evident that winter is quickly approaching, and the weather changes this time of year always get me thinking about how I am going to help our feathered friends survive the winter. Here are five tips for helping the birds survive the coming cold months.
1.      Provide suet.
Suet is a great source of protein for the birds. This will help them stay warm and survive those extremely cold nights. Remember that the larger woodpeckers much prefer a suet feeder with a tail prop!
http://birdsandbloomsblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/Downy-Woodpecker.jpg

This Downy Woodpecker is feasting on some suet that will help her stay warm on this cold winter day.
2. Put out a heated birdbath.
Once lakes and streams start to freeze, birds have a difficult time finding water. By offering a heated birdbath for your birds to drink from, you will not only help them survive but will also attract many more birds than you would with feeders alone.
3. Offer peanuts in your feeders.
Peanuts, like suet, are another good source of protein for your birds. Woodpeckers, nuthatches, and chickadees are just a few of the many species that will frequent a peanut feeder.
4. Use a ground feeder.
There are quite a few species that are not comfortable coming to traditional bird feeders. Most of our native sparrows such as Song, White-throated, and White-crowned, prefer to feed on the ground. By offering seed using a ground feeder, you will ensure that these species have easy access to food even when the ground is covered with snow.
http://birdsandbloomsblog.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/americantreesparrow4.jpg

5. Leave your bird houses up.
There are several species that will use bird houses as roosting sites during the winter. Bluebirds do this most commonly. Be sure to clean out the old nesting material and block any of the ventilation holes so they can retain their warmth. If you can, flip the orientation of the front of the house so that the hole is on the bottom.






West Nile Virus Responsible for Utah Eagle Deaths



Laboratory results have confirmed what officials with the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources have been suspecting: West Nile virus killed the bald eagles that have died in Utah over the past few weeks.
Testing at the Utah Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory in Logan, Utah, and the National Wildlife Health Center in Madison, Wisconsin, has definitively ruled out many other possible causes of death, including toxic chemicals or poisons, lead poisoning, bacterial infections and several other viruses, including avian influenza and avian vacuolar myelinopathy.
How did the eagles get West Nile virus?
Officials aren't certain how the eagles got West Nile virus, as the disease typically affects birds (including eagles) during warmer months, when mosquitoes that carry the disease are active.
They think the birds might have contracted the virus after eating infected eared grebes that died recently on Great Salt Lake.
Leslie McFarlane, wildlife disease coordinator for the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources (DWR), says more than 2 million eared grebes stop at Great Salt Lake during their winter migration. Almost every year, about one percent of the population that visits the lake dies from a bacterial disease called avian cholera.
"Every time grebes die," she says, "we send some of the dead birds to a laboratory for testing. Usually, avian cholera jumps out as the cause of death. This year, though, the initial laboratory results were not as conclusive. That led us to believe that something else might have killed the grebes this year."
Additional testing on the eared grebes, however, has led to findings that are consistent with what's being found in the bald eagles.
In the winter, bald eagles obtain most of their food by eating dead animals. Since all of the eagles that have died have been within flying distance of the lake, McFarlane thinks the eagles might have contracted West Nile virus after eating grebes that died at the lake from the disease.
No human health concerns
JoDee Baker, epidemiologist with the Utah Department of Health, says people do not need to be concerned; dead grebes and dead eagles do not pose a risk to people.
"People become infected with West Nile virus after being bitten by a mosquito that carries the virus," Baker says. "Although there are other very rare ways you can get the virus, such as receiving contaminated blood or organs from an infected person, mosquitoes are, by far, the most common method of transmission. Since the mosquitoes that transmit West Nile virus aren't active in the winter, there's no risk to the public's health."
While the eagles don't pose a risk to public health, both Baker and McFarlane encourage you to not touch or handle sick or dead birds, including eagles. Instead, call the nearest DWR office. A wildlife officer or a biologist will be dispatched to get the bird.
Dr. Bruce King, state veterinarian with the Utah Department of Agriculture and Food, says domestic livestock are safe too. "Because mosquitoes aren't active in the winter," he says, "we see no eminent danger to domestic livestock in Utah, including backyard chickens, horses, or other small or large farm operations."
Grebes will be gone soon
McFarlane says the migration of eared grebes through Utah is almost over for the winter. "By the second week of January," she says, "almost all of the grebes will be gone."
West Nile virus can live for a few days in the carcass of a bird that has just died, however, so there's still a chance that additional eagles will get sick and die, even after the grebes leave. But the risk to eagles should decrease quickly.
McFarlane says between 750 and 1,200 bald eagles visit Utah in the winter. "Even though it's difficult to watch eagles die," she says, "the deaths that have and still might occur won't affect the overall health of the bald eagle population that winters in Utah or the overall population in theUnited States."
On the morning of Dec. 31, the number of eagles that had died in Utah stood at 27 birds. Twenty-one of those birds were found dead in the wild. Six additional birds died while being treated at rehabilitation centers.
On the morning of Dec. 31, rehabilitation centers were treating five sick eagles. The sick eagles appear to be responding well to the treatments.
For more information, go to: http://wildlife.utah.gov

Ducks Unlimited hires director of conservation for four states


Ducks Unlimited hires director of conservation for four states

Mike George is now leading Ducks Unlimited's conservation work in NebraskaKansas,Colorado and Wyoming as director of conservation programs for those states. George is located in DU's field office in Grand IslandNeb.
"I am looking forward to working for one of the premier conservation organizations in North America," George said. "DU's reputation for putting work on the ground is impeccable, and I am excited to be a part of it."
He was the Nebraska state supervisor for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, overseeing the work of 13 professionals to review impacts on migratory birds and endangered species, as well as collaborate with stakeholders. George also worked with the Corps of Engineers for 25 years, with a substantial amount of time focused on ecosystem restoration along the Missouri River.
"Mike's experience with team leadership, conflict resolution and partnership development will strengthen DU's team in the Great Plains," said Steve Adair, DU director of operations for the Great Plains Region. "Mike has been very involved with the Platte River Recovery Program and in developing innovative solutions for species impacted by energy development."
George grew up in Colorado and has spent the majority of his professional career in Nebraska. He is currently completing a Ph.D. with the University of Nebraska-Omaha.

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Grasslands Get Squeezed As Another 1.6 Million Acres Go Into Crops


By Dan Charles
National Public Radio

As the year winds down, we here at NPR are looking at a few key numbers that explain the big trends of 2013.
Today's number: 1.6 million.
That's 1.6 million acres — about the area of the state of Delaware.
That's how much land was removed this year from the federal Conservation Reserve Program, or CRP, which pays farmers to keep land covered with native grasses or sometimes trees. Most of that land now will produce crops like corn or wheat.
It's a sign of the shifting economic tides that are transforming America's farming landscape. If you drive through farm country, especially in the northern plains, you'll see large fields covered with grass.
The federal government is paying for much of that grass. The U.S. Department of Agriculture pays farmers to plant permanent vegetation, usually native grasses, on that land instead of crops. This brings back a little bit of the prairie, which comes with all kinds of environmental benefits.
In 2005, I spent several days touring CRP land in both North Dakota and Kansas. In North Dakota, biologist Ron Reynolds, then with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, led me into a field of tall grass. He pulled back some of the grass and showed me a nest with seven duck eggs. "The eggs are warm," he said. "You can feel the eggs. [The mother duck] is just starting to incubate." Reynolds was ecstatic about how CRP fields were helping to bring back duck populations.
But ducks are only the start of it.
"Goodness, there's thousands of species that live in grasslands, including several hundred species of higher plants," says Carter Johnson, an ecologist at South Dakota State University in BrookingsS.D. Plus, permanent grass cover keeps soil from washing away. "With those deeps roots that grasses have, and thick thatch, the water has a hard time getting a hold of the soil," says Johnson.
So more land in CRP means cleaner streams, less fertilizer runoff and more carbon stored in the soil.
Back when Reynolds was showing me those duck eggs, there were 34 million acres enrolled in the CRP — an area roughly the size of the state of New York. In recent years, though, the conservation reserve has shrunk by more than 25 percent, including those 1.6 million acres that farmers took out of the program this past year. It's partly because Congress has cut funding for the program. But there's a more important reason: high grain prices.
Farmers have been making a lot of money recently growing corn, soybeans, and wheat. They're bidding up prices for land, and landowners are cashing in. In southwestern Iowa, near the town of Stanton, the owners of about 60 acres decided to take it out of the CRP. They rented it instead to farmer Mark Peterson. "They felt that it would make more income for them, renting it out, than it would being in the CRP," says Peterson.
Peterson recognizes that "it is fragile ground," so he says he'll be extra careful with that land, which is on a hillside. Some parts are quite steep, and the soil could easily wash away. He grew soybeans on it this year, but he tried to disturb the soil as little as possible. And he'll plant cover crops in the off season to anchor the soil.
Ecologist Johnson, at South Dakota State University, says the shrinking Conservation Reserve is just one part of a larger trend: Farmers are ripping up other grasslands, too, including native prairie that never was plowed. "I've seen things that I never thought I'd see here in South Dakota," he says. "With these land prices going up, there actually are people out there with Bobcats and front end loaders, pulling out the rocks in hundreds of acres of land that's been in pasture all these years."
Taking all this land, he says, and planting crops on it, just has to be a bad thing for water quality, soil erosion and wildlife.
The shrinking CRP is a cause for concern, says Jason Weller, who's in charge of the environmental conservation programs at the U.S. Department of Agriculture. "But I think it's important that there's a lot of other approaches that we can take to manage, not just the soil and water, but also these wildlife populations."
His agency, the USDA's Natural Resources Conservation Service, has experts in almost every county, working with farmers. They offer farmers advice on how to reduce soil erosion and provide habitat for wildlife.
For instance, land that's coming out of the CRP doesn't have to go into crops, Weller says. Some farmers may want to use it to graze cattle. "We have assistance we can then provide to them, so we can keep that land in grass," he says.
There's a growing demand for more food and biofuel, Weller says, and farmers are responding to that demand. Most of them also want to protect soil, streams and wildlife, he says.
Yet it can be difficult to do both. 

Pacific Flyway Marine IBAs


Pacific Flyway Marine IBAs

In an effort to raise awareness about the conservation of seabirds, National Audubon, the coordinator of the Important Bird Areas (IBA) program in the U.S., has released a new interactive map that allows users to explore some of the most important places for seabirds along the Pacific Coast.
The map extends from the icy Beaufort Sea along Alaska's north coast south to the tropical seas of Mexico'sBaja Peninsula. This initial mapping is important since threats to seabirds include ocean pollution, human overfishing of critical food fish, and human-caused disturbance to breeding, feeding, and resting sites.
            The interactive map specifically identifies 216 new and potential marine IBAs.
            Easy to use and full of photos and facts about seabirds, the map allows users to browse the newest marine IBAs to learn more about where seabirds nest and feed. For those who seek a more in-depth view, or who want information about certain species or places, the map has deeper layers with species profiles for the key bird species, the habitat descriptions, as well as detail about the specific conservation issues being faced.
            Many questions faced the researchers who put this project together. For example, how do you draw a boundary on the ocean? Since seabirds nest in dense colonies on cliffs and rocky islands, how far away from those sites should be considered important to the birds? What about places in the ocean with no landmarks but are good feeding areas for birds?
            Using data from the US Geological Survey's North Pacific Pelagic Seabird Database and the US Fish & Wildlife Service's North Pacific Seabird Colony Database, plus a strong dose of ingenuity, researchers have started to address those questions and have made a map that is another step toward approaching seabirds within an IBA context.
            See here for the interactive map: http://gis.audubon.org/pacificflyway_ibas/
            For additional information about IBA programs worldwide, including those across the U.S., check the National Audubon Society's Important Bird Area program web site at: www.audubon.org/bird/iba/   

KC SCI Youth Wildlife Conservation Experience


KC SCI Youth Wildlife Conservation Experience

The Kansas City Chapter of Safari Club International is hosting the Second Annual Youth Wildlife Conservation Experience at the Overland Park Convention Center. The event is scheduled for Saturday, Feb. 8 from 8:00-1:30 at the Convention Center.
This event is centered around Wildlife Law Enforcement, African Hunting & Conservation, as well as Local Hunting & Outdoor Opportunities. Participants will have access to shoot archery, air rifles, as well as engage in a virtual reality hunting simulator. Meet Miss Kansas and hear about her archery experience. The event is open to the first 150 Boy Scouts and Girl Scouts between the ages of 14-16, and 40 spots for adult leaders. Lunch will be provided for all registrants.
Everyone who registers will also be granted free admission to Kansas City Safari Club’s Annual Hunter’s Expo. To register visitwww.kcsci.com & click on Youth Wildlife Conservation Day under the Events tab.
Don’t miss out on this educational and fun outdoor experience! Space is limited so register today!

Kansas NRCS Announces National EQIP Initiatives for 2014


Kansas NRCS Announces National EQIP Initiatives for 2014


Eric B. Banks, State Conservationist with U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) announces three National Initiatives being offered in Kansas through the Environmental Quality Incentives Program (EQIP): On-Farm Energy, Organic, and Seasonal High Tunnel.
While NRCS accepts applications for EQIP on a continuous basis throughout the year, there will be two  sign-up periods, with cutoff deadlines of February 21, 2014, and April 18, 2014, for the On-Farm Energy, Organic, and Seasonal High Tunnel Initiatives. 
            “We encourage our producers to take advantage of the conservation opportunities being made available to them through these EQIP Initiatives,” Banks said.
            Initiatives Overview
On-Farm Energy Initiative:  Producers work with an NRCS-approved Technical Service Provider (TSP) to develop Agricultural Energy Management Plans or farm energy audits that assess energy consumption on an operation.  NRCS may also provide assistance to implement various recommended measures identified in the energy audit through the use of conservation practice standards offered through this initiative.
            Organic Initiative:  NRCS will assist producers with installation of conservation practices on agricultural operations related to organic production.  Producers currently certified as organic, transitioning to organic, or National Organic Program exempt will have access to a broad set of conservation practices to assist in treating their resource concerns while fulfilling many of the requirements in an Organic System Plan.
            Seasonal High Tunnel Initiative:  NRCS helps producers implement high tunnels that extend growing seasons for high value crops in an environmentally safe manner.  High tunnel benefits include better plant and soil quality and fewer nutrients and pesticides in the environment.
            Eligibility
EQIP offers financial and technical assistance to eligible participants to install or implement structural and management practices on eligible agricultural land.  Conservation practices must be implemented to NRCS standards and specifications.  In Kansas, socially disadvantaged, limited resource, and beginning farmers and ranchers will receive a higher payment rate for eligible conservation practices applied.
            Information Available
For more information about EQIP, or other programs offered by NRCS, please contact your local USDA Service Center or go to the Web site www.ks.nrcs.usda.gov.  Follow us on Twitter @NRCS_Kansas.  

Saturday, January 4, 2014

Hunting Whitetails During Antlerless Season a Fit Choice



Venison meat a wholesome option for folks eating healthier in 2014

Making healthier choices is a popular New Year’s resolution for many, but putting healthier practices into action doesn’t have to be limited to the grocery store or gym. Hunting deer often requires quite a bit of physical exertion, and from trekking to your blind or treestand to recovering the animal and processing the meat, hunting can be a great benefit to your health.
Known for being lean, venison meat is a great meal option for those looking to make healthier food choices this year and add variety add the dinner table. From Jan. 1-31, the Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism will offer three whitetail antlerless-only seasons open to anyone with a valid 2014 hunting license and any unfilled deer permits. As of Dec. 31, 2013, hunters were able to purchase Antlerless-only White-tailed Deer permits without having an either-sex permit in possession. Permits may be purchased wherever licenses are sold and online.
The season will kick off the New Year with an extended firearm whitetail antlerless season Jan. 1-12 (open statewide), followed by a special extended firearm whitetail antlerless season Jan. 13-Jan. 19 (open in Units 7, 8, 15 and 19 only), and an archery extended whitetail antlerless season Jan. 20-31 (in Unit 19 only). Hunters who did not fill a deer permit during one of the regular 2013 seasons (muzzleloader, early firearm, archery, regular firearm) may also use that permit during these seasons. However, all permits revert to Antlerless-Only White-tailed Deer permits, and unit restrictions listed on the permit apply.
For more information, consult the 2013 Kansas Hunting and Furharvesting Regulations Summary, available wherever licenses are sold or online at www.ksoutdoors.com  

January 1 Marks Start of New Hunting, Fishing Season



The New Year brings new outdoor opportunities, at a discount for some

As 2013 comes to a close, the New Year brings with it the hope and anticipation of an even bigger and better year for hunters and anglers in 2014. From droughts and population lows, to marshes almost miraculously refilling and improved nesting conditions, the coming year gives outdoor enthusiasts something to look forward to.
And although spring seasons aren’t here just yet, now is a great time to start planning your adventure, starting with a 2014 license. And, greatly reduced license fees for youth are being introduced in 2014. Thanks to easy online ordering, purchasing a 2014 hunting or fishing license couldn’t be more hassle-free. Simply visit ksoutdoors.com and click “Licenses/Permits.” There you can enter your information, choose a license, then pay and print. 2014 hunting and fishing licenses and permits can also be purchased at any Kansas Department of Wildlife, Parks and Tourism state park or regional office, and at any license vendor.
Hunting and Fishing License Pricing for 2014
HUNTING
Annual Hunting License - Resident: $20.50
Hunting - Nonresident: $72.50
Multi-year Youth Hunting - Resident: $42.50
Hunting - Nonresident under 16 years: $37.50
Senior Annual Hunt (age 65-74): $11.50
FISHING
Annual Fishing License - Resident: $20.50
Annual Fishing License - Nonresident: $42.50
Multi-Year Youth Fishing (16-20 years old) - Resident: $42.50
Senior (65-74 years old) - Resident: $11.50
COMBINATION
Combo (Hunt/Fish) - Resident: $38.50
Combo (Hunt/Fish) - Nonresident: $112.50
Multi-year Youth Combo (Hunt and Fish) (16-20 years old) ­- Resident: $72.50
Senior Annual Combo (Hunt/Fish) (age 65-74): $20.50
Senior Annual Combo Lifetime Pass (Hunt/Fish) (age 65-74): $42.50
New this year, significant price reductions have been placed on youth deer, turkey and antelope permits, for hunters age 15 and younger. Youth fees that have been reduced beginning 2014 are as follows:
RESIDENT
General Resident Youth Deer Permit: $10.00
General Resident Youth Antelope Permit: $10.00
General Resident Youth Turkey Permit (1-bird limit): $5.00
Resident Youth Turkey Game Tag (1-bird limit): $5.00
General Resident Youth Turkey Permit/Game Tag Combination (2-bird limit): $10.00
NONRESIDENT
Nonresident Youth Turkey Permit (1-bird limit): $10.00
Nonresident Youth Turkey Game Tag (1-bird limit): $10.00
Nonresident Youth Turkey Permit/Game Tag Combination (2-bird limit): $20.00
Nonresident Youth Combination 2-deer Permit (antlered deer and antlerless white-tailed deer): $90.00
Nonresident Youth Antelope Permit (Archery only): $100.00
For information on 2014 license and permit pricing and requirements, visitwww.ksoutdoors.com