South Dakota prairie land in danger of losing hunter's paradise

UGUIDE

Active member
By DENNIS ANDERSON

Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

NEAR PRESHO, S.D. - In the nearly half-century he's lived in South Dakota, John Cooper has seen countless beautiful prairie sunsets. But none perhaps prettier than one on a recent late afternoon that arched wild hues of orange, red, yellow and crimson across a darkening sky. "I never get tired of that," Cooper said, nodding toward the colorful horizon, a 12-gauge double-gun slung over one shoulder and his Labrador retriever walking ahead. However barren in appearance, South Dakota prairies pulse with life. Eagles, hawks, prairie dogs, pheasants, ducks, geese and sharp-tailed grouse thrive here. So do coyotes, a pack of which yipped their singsong appreciation for the coming night as Cooper sleeved his scattergun following a long afternoon's pheasant hunt. The retired director of South Dakota's Game, Fish and Parks Department, serving 12 years under two governors, Cooper also has been a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service enforcement agent in North Dakota, South Dakota and Nebraska. In those states, he traveled nearly every highway, byway and country road during a 22-year career as a federal officer. So when he says change is occurring to the South Dakota landscape at a rate never seen before, with far-reaching implications for wildlife and people, he speaks with a perspective few share. "What has happened here in the past four years is unprecedented," Cooper said as he and I climbed into my pickup and rumbled over a dirt two-track. "Anyone who thinks South Dakota can continue to produce the pheasants, ducks and other wildlife it has in the past just doesn't know what's going on here. You're quite possibly witnessing the end of an era. Some of the nation's last, best prairies and potholes are going away." Responsible for the changes is what farmer, rancher and hunting outfitter Steve Halverson of Kennebec, S.D., calls a "perfect storm" of high commodity prices, rising land values, breakthroughs in crop engineering, a seemingly feverish desire by some eastern South Dakota farmers to drain their lands of water, and relatively paltry federal farm bill conservation incentives. "I honestly think that unless something unexpected happens, we may never see the high pheasant populations again that we've seen in recent years," Halverson said. Duck production in the state is also at risk. The Natural Resources Conservation Service in Brookings, S.D., has a backlog of more than 4,500 requests by farmers and ranchers to issue wetland determinations on their lands - up nearly tenfold in only four years. Most appeals are from landowners wanting to increase their tillable acres by draining water from their property. "The requests have been doubling each year," said Janet Oertley, NRCS state conservationist in Huron, S.D. In 2011, with prices hovering around $6 per bushel, South Dakota farmers planted about 5.2 million acres of corn, a 650,000-acre increase from 2010. "What's driving it is greed," said farmer and rancher Jim Faulstich of Highmore, S.D., who believes a balanced landscape is critical to South Dakota's economic well-being. "I've lost some friends over comments like that. But there's no other way to describe it." Continued cropland expansion will affect most South Dakota wildlife, experts say, including songbirds such as grasshopper sparrows, sedge wrens, vesper sparrows, dickcissels, savannah sparrows, lark buntings, chestnut-collared longspurs and bobolinks. Prairie ecosystems need birds to distribute seeds of native grasses, whose deep roots hold the fragile prairie soil together, particularly during heavy rains and spring flooding. Pheasant - and pheasant hunter - declines also are expected as crop acres increase, particularly in years such as 2011, when a tough winter and wet spring helped push the state's ringneck population down about 40 percent from 2010. "When we had between 8 million and 9 million pheasants, as we did in recent years, we could count on about 85,000 resident pheasant hunters and 115,000 nonresidents," Cooper said. "With continued habitat loss, we'll lose (numbers in) both (categories)." Towns small and large will feel the pinch. "The $200 million that pheasant hunting brings to the state each year can't match the state's agriculture economy," Cooper said. "But the pheasant money trickles down to small-town cafes and motels and gas stations throughout the eastern half of the state. Ag money by comparison is much more concentrated." In 1985, when the Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) was first included in the federal farm bill, corn was about $3 a bushel, recent borrowing rates had hit 20 percent and many farmers were struggling financially. CRP proved attractive at the time because it guaranteed cash to farmers who set aside marginally tillable and highly erodible acres, planting them instead in cover crops to benefit soil, water and wildlife. South Dakota CRP lands peaked at about 1.7 million acres in 1997. But as corn prices have risen - fueled in part by federally subsidized ethanol production - CRP has declined in the state to about 1.1 million acres, with 200,000 or more acres expected to leave the plan this year. "There's no longer any incentive to stay in CRP if you're a farmer," said Curt Korzan of Kimball, S.D., who with his wife, Lorie, and two grown sons, Corbin and Cody, farms and runs a pheasant hunting lodge over 3,500 acres, about 80 percent of which is in wildlife habitat. "Around here," Korzan said, "CRP only pays $50 to $60 an acre, while farmland rental rates are $150 to $160 an acre." Korzan said a 1,000-acre tract near his operation recently sold for $3,000 an acre - $2,500 more than the owner paid for it. "It was 100 percent habitat, perfect for wildlife, with 12 groves of trees," Korzan said. "The new owners are going to bulldoze all of it and put it in corn." If South Dakota were only losing CRP acres, pheasant, duck and other wildlife losses would be significant but somewhat manageable, with the help of other government and nongovernment conservation programs. But vastly larger tracts of unprotected grasslands not enrolled in CRP are being plowed, too. A 2007 study by the federal Government Accountability Office found that even while CRP protected 1.7 million acres in South Dakota, the state lost another 1.8 million acres of prairie to newly tilled croplands. Taxpayers - who kick in about 60 percent of farmers' crop insurance costs ($7.1 billion in 2011) - pick up a big part of the tab for cropland expansion, according to the GAO. Crop insurance minimizes the chance farmers will lose money when new ground is broken. "As a result, what you're looking at is the transformation of South Dakota into something more closely resembling northern Iowa or western Minnesota, where virtually all wildlife is gone," Cooper said. Just three weeks ago, the U.S. Department of Agriculture cleared for sale Monsanto's latest genetically engineered marvel: drought-resistant corn. Doing so, the agency delivered a Christmas gift to South Dakota and other dry-land farmers who want to plant corn where none has grown before. Moisture shortfalls are to blame for 40 percent of North American crop losses, Monsanto estimates. It's also the reason many South Dakota grassland ranchers traditionally have run cattle on their semi-arid lands instead of growing corn. But crop engineering now boosts a farmer's chance for profit even on those marginal lands. It also raises the value of those properties, in some cases to $6,000 an acre in eastern South Dakota. The result, said Carl Madsen, a retired U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service biologist living in Brookings, is that "the intensity of land use in South Dakota is moving west into the grasslands." "The genetically modified crops got the ball rolling," he said. "Then the tile drainage started to move into South Dakota in a big way. Add to it $6-a-bushel corn. For wildlife, it's a bad combination." Said Korzan, the farmer and hunting operator who lives near Kimball, S.D.: "The mentality of a lot of young farmers in South Dakota in particular is that they're going to till everything they can. They've never seen a bad year. They will. Maybe it'll be because we overproduce. Maybe because switchgrass will someday replace corn in ethanol. Either way, the bank will still want payments on that $250,000 tractor and $350,000 combine." South Dakota wildlife will suffer further if the farm bill being debated in Congress fails to link conservation with farmers' crop insurance, Madsen said. "The ag industry is lobbying against it, and whether Congress has the stomach to stand up to them, I don't now," he said. "Right now, to participate in federal commodity programs, farmers have to abide by certain wetland and grassland protection rules. "That's not going to happen in the next farm bill, because Congress needs to cut costs. Our only chance for conservation is to require farmers who take out crop insurance - most of which is paid for by taxpayers, anyway - to not drain wetlands or plow under fragile grasslands." Faulstich supports the idea. "I'll use myself as an example," he said. "In 2010 I had the most profitable return per acre of corn I've ever had, and I still got direct payments and subsidies from the government. It's really unfair to taxpayers and to people who live on the land who are conservation-minded." John Cooper considers himself one of the latter. But after he and I followed three pretty good dogs on a recent afternoon without putting up a rooster pheasant - something virtually unheard of in South Dakota - he wondered whether the outing had been an omen of things to come. "I hope not," he said.

Read more here: http://www.kansascity.com/2012/01/04/3351804/south-dakota-prairie-land-in-danger.html#storylink=cpy
 
Lengthy read, however it really puts the issue into a perspective so that every one can understand.
 
Saw the writing on the wall about 5 yeras ago. Areas east Miller will never see numbers like in the past again. Right now producers have declaired war on wetlands and grass.
 
Ag interests lobby against the linking the conservation measures to crop insurance. All you really need to read. Once again we see the government favor a few select, loud, and well heeled, individuals, over the welfare of the rest of the country. Sacrificing, the fertility of the US soil, water quality, perhaps even our health directly, for short term gain. These will be the same producers who line up with their hand out, or in your pocket, and hold rallies and rail that the government should do more to help them when the crash comes. After all they did all this for us! Booked all those windfall profits, drove up food prices using food for fuel. The government encouraged them! All true enough,sure hope these guys are using that money to reduce debt. But after 30+ years of this, I know better. As usual, the crash will come after the bulldozer, and the drain tile, but just in time for the taxpayer to jump in and try to pay them to fix what we paid them to destroy in the first place. Welcome to America, we're the government we're here to help! In the movie "The Mission", a catholic Bishop, after presiding silently over the siezure of ground, destruction and enslavement of the local indigeinous indians, by Spain and Portugal. When approached by a Spanish governor who say's " Such is the World" with a shrug, To which the bishop say's, " No, such as we have made the world, such as I have made it". Such as we have made america, if there is a great wrong in doing these things, then there's plenty of blame to go around, because we either helped, or stood silently by. Looks like a line has been drawn, either your on one side or the other, as the old joke goes, if your undecided, your a mugwamp, a silly bird with an indefensible position, with it's mug on one side of the fence, and it's wamp on the other. Classic mugwamp's USDA, and the Army Corp of Engineers.
 
I'm wondering if corn prices will drop now that the government subsidy is over. As of De. 31 I believe the govt no longer protects ethanol producers. Not sure about the tariff on imported ethanol...

If producers of ethanol have lower margins, perhaps the demand for corn will drop as well as the price per bushel.

Anyone have a theory about this??
 
As bad as the move to till every last acre of land is, the fact that the gov't is still giving subsidies (in a bad economy) to many wealthy millionaire farmers at the same time crops are as high as they are is downright OBSCENE!!!
 
I used to know an old country lawyer who owned the Meade Cy. SD ranch he was born on until the day he died.He said he made more money in drought years,or hail events etc. than he ever made when things went smoothly.

There is an ad in all the local ag papers for months now stating "looking to buy up to $10M farmland,either currently in production,or capable of production,call me,let's talk.Confidentiality assurred.
 
What I don't understand is why do the landowners wnating to tile have to have a wetland determination by the NRCS. I know I needed one to qualify for FWP CRP.

I would think the only reason for determination would be for govenrment financial aid on tiling? Tell me that ain't the reason!
 
The reason for a wetland determination is to see if the wetland is protected by the clean water act or not. If it is it can't be altered, if it isn't the farmer can do with it as he wishes. The government doesn't finance any draining of wetlands. I can tell you from experience, if the area has much value to wildlife as a wetland, the govt. won't let you touch it.
 
Farmers are very creative at draining wetlands without actually running tile through the wetland, aka pattern tiling. I'm sure there was tons of wetlands determination going on this fall after the producer burned and plowed the wetland. They are really good at hiding wetlands esp. in dry falls like the last. Hefty's have a vidoe on-line about hiding wetlands.
 
The reason for a wetland determination is to see if the wetland is protected by the clean water act or not. If it is it can't be altered, if it isn't the farmer can do with it as he wishes. The government doesn't finance any draining of wetlands. I can tell you from experience, if the area has much value to wildlife as a wetland, the govt. won't let you touch it.

Yep, people like to overlook this fact. The legaly tiled fields and wet spots were done with the 100% approval of the USDA. Farmers are only do what they are allowed to.
 
Yep, people like to overlook this fact. The legaly tiled fields and wet spots were done with the 100% approval of the USDA. Farmers are only do what they are allowed to.

Legal and right are two different things

http://minnesota.publicradio.org/display/web/2009/09/24/wetlands-restoration/
Quote
"Fergus Falls, Minn. — State and federal officials are using science to help target areas for wetland restoration as part of the state's 50-year plan to add 2 million acres of waterfowl habitat in the state; however, even though Minnesota is spending millions to restore wetlands, the state is still losing more than it restores.

The western third of Minnesota was once covered with wetlands; hundreds of thousands of small potholes and large marshes.

Now, more than 90 percent are drained.
 
SD stands to lose millions in yearly revenue if pheasant habitat is severly reduced......sure the preserves will survive, but why would an NR drive hundreds of miles to shoot pen raised birds, when you can do that at home?
(although some do that now, they just don't know any better)

hopefully the wild pheasant population never declines to that degree.....:eek:
 
Yep, people like to overlook this fact. The legaly tiled fields and wet spots were done with the 100% approval of the USDA. Farmers are only do what they are allowed to.

UDSA overseeing a farmer is like letting the Bernie Madoff with The Securities and Exchange Commision oversee brokerage firms, we see how well that worked. All that chicanery was blessed by the proper authority too! What success would this have if the EPA got to make those decisions? An alternative fought tooth and nail by the ag lobby. While we're at it lets get OSHA involved in farm safety, since currently the industry is largely exempt, and leads lists of most dangerous occupations. These are all agencies and issues the rest of us dreamers deal with on a daily basis, along with a myriad of others, we'dlike you to join us on an even playing field. In addition, I would like to see somebody who's a professional independent wildlife person, weigh in on the proposed value of a 30' wide buffer strip, and a few 1-5 Acre isolated patchs of monoculture fescue or brome, maybe 20 total acres out of a section, which gets mowed, sometimes baled on a waiver, and give us a real world assessment of it's value to wildlife. My guess is nearly zero. So my assessment of the theory of paying farmers to do only what they are willing to do, as long as they get paid handsomely for it, is it won't due any good but shuffle some paper and give the ag lobby as a whole a new reason to puff out their chest, point, and tell us what great stewards of the land they are. I may have been born at night, but not last night! Voices on this board are increasingly driving me to the position that we can have a safe, beautiful, wildlife filled enviornment, or we can have large scale progressive agriculuture. I fear the two are becoming mutually exclusive. Which brings me to the perfect definition of "Big AG", simply put farming used to be a lifestyle, as much, or more than a job, almost a sectarian religion of oneness with the land, for a few it still is, when it becomes simply a business, like GM, Boeing, or Microsoft, whether it's a family corporation or a multinational corporation, to be traded, treated as an asset, or commodity, with cash as the final determination of value, rather than value the existence of the land itself, and for it's self, it's "BIG AG", and it's not an improvement. We, the progressive neighbors, bankers, equipment dealers, seed vendors, chemical companies, laugh at the guy who putters along with 30 year old machinery, open pollinated crops, raises a few pigs outside, the land is dear to this guy, he'd rather die then leave it. Sometimes we even ridicule, how dare they not comform, Sometimes they even get sued, when some stray pollen of a patented plant finds it's way to fertilize his old fashioned crop. At the least he's a curiosity, at worst a danger to the status quo.We need to grind him into the mold like we would his ground if the old coot would sell. I wish we had thousands of him! We used to.
 
Oldandnew I have a suggestion for you. Buy a few thousand acres and turn it into a wildlife preserve and see how much money you make. Farmers are running a business to support their families, not to give nonlandowners a place to hunt. With that said, I will put the bird cover on our farm up against anybodies. It just gets under my skin when guys that don't have a clue, try to tell us making a living of the land what we need to be doing.
 
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Pheasantkiller, Why is it always the same old mantra that none of us understand farming? I do own land, and I work with farmers every single day of the year. I don't try to tell you personally how to do anything, I wouldn't presume to tell you what to do, because I have no idea of how you operate or what your goals are. You aren't asking me and seem not particularily open to discussion. I would also be surprised to learn you are defending any operation which do not allow for any conservation practices, that aren't mandated. My comment is directed at a predomination of what's going on. After all, a short drive through the nation will yield a great variety of enviornmental damage being done by modern ag, manufacturing plants, mining, cities by just existing. I presume that you would not approve, but I don't know. If your defensive and take this personally, than perhaps the issue is yours;) By the way I do have a war chest saved up to buy additional ground in the next crash. Last time I bought ground for 200.00 an acre that sold for 750.00 to $1000 a short time before to go with some inherited ground. Should have gone into debt and bought more. I farm some, crp some, it's not under stress, neither am I, it provides a decent return, provides for a variety of wildlife. I'm sure I could minimize the edges, enlarge the waterways, use more pesticides, control more weeds, and make more money, which seems to be your point. Interestingly enough it's my point too! I don't care enough about the dollars, to trade what I have, for the dollars I'd recieve. That seems to offend a lot of people.
 
Oldandnew I have a suggestion for you. Buy a few thousand acres and turn it into a wildlife preserve and see how much money you make. Farmers are running a business to support their families, not to give nonlandowners a place to hunt. With that said, I will put the bird cover on our farm up against anybodies. It just gets under my skin when guys that don't have a clue, try to tell us making a living of the land what we need to be doing.

There's a mammoth of difference between a wildlife preserve and leaving portions of our land, or sharing our land with the rest of God's creation in the form of leaving some much needed, vital, (for survival) habitat in the ground.

With that said, let's not kid ourselves. The fact is the end is nearing for wildlife (at least in widespread, healthy numbers). We are witnessing the last breath, the last gasp for air before the grip of death takes it's hold.

The "more" attitude will continue on and grow with this generation and the next. The ground will become all the more bairn with ultra clean mega fields of dirt. Open dirt. What a site! Open dirt!!! Nothing but dirt!!!

What was God thinking when he made creation? What was the point of the Garden of Eden? Did God have it all wrong when Adam and Eve where called to take care of it? To nourish, maintain, and tend to it?

Did our creator waste his time with the rest of creation?

We're sorry Lord but the rest of creation must go for the time being. Keep you're tithing, your demands on self restraint and control. We will do this our way.


And with that my friends, we've laid nothing more than a ground of ass-kicking for our future. And I'm not just speaking in terms of farming either. This attitude is well spread throughout our culture today. And all will pay the price.
 
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