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Friends of Nachusa Grasslands PrairiE-Update
Blog Posts – August to October 2020
Autumn Photo Gallery
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From August to October 2020, our Friends of Nachusa Grasslands bloggers have been busy documenting their restoration experiences and insights. The Nachusa Grasslands Blog had posts written by four authors: Erin Rowland, Charles Larry, Susan Kleiman, and Antonio Del Valle, Our blog coordinator is Dee Hudson, with the assistance of Erin Rowland and Heather Herakovich, and our editor is James Higby. Photographers Dee Hudson and Charles Larry have also shared their talents with stunning autumn images.
Learn about Nachusa from a variety of perspectives. Sample excerpts from each post or click the titles to read the complete articles.

Taking a Bird's Eye View: GIS and Spatial Analysis at Nachusa

When I pictured my summer as Nachusa’s summer science extern, these were the images that filled my head. I couldn’t wait to spend my weeks under the sun trapping small mammals and surveying plant diversity. Meanwhile, the universe had other plans. 

Because of the COVID-19 pandemic, research looked a little different this year. Many field scientists were able to conduct safe and socially distant work, while some researchers had to cancel their field seasons altogether. I was one of the unlucky ones. Instead of a summer in the field, I spent the summer at a computer. The funny thing is, this turn of events helped me to see the big picture.

By Erin Rowland
Nachusa Grasslands ​Summer Science Extern
NIU PhD Student
Friends of Nachusa Grasslands Scientific Research Grant Recipient
August 2020

Nachusa's Sandhill Cranes

Nachusa Grasslands has had sandhill cranes stop over for brief periods over several years. As far as is known, this is the first time that a pair of sandhills have nested and raised two colts (as the young sandhills are called) at Nachusa. It is usual for sandhill cranes to lay two eggs, a few days to a week apart, but it is rare that both colts will live to fledge. Some reasons as to why only one colt survives are various predators, lack of sufficient food, and sometimes the aggression of the older crane toward its slightly younger sibling. At Nachusa both of the young have fledged and are flying.

By late summer the sandhills will probably move to an area where there is a larger crane population and more abundant food to fatten up for migration, which will happen sometime in the fall. The juveniles will stay with the parents during migration and through the winter.

By Charles Larry
Nachusa Grasslands Volunteer
August 2020

Nachusa's Shrubs
 
Shrubs and vines can sometimes be underappreciated, or worse, unknown. I will present a blog now and then on those species growing at Nachusa Grasslands. I am starting with five shrubs that we have good photos for, although we have identified at least 45 shrubs species and 20 vines (some woody and some herbaceous). By shrub, I mean woody plants that attain less than 20 feet in height and often have multiple stems rising from the same roots.

I seek to understand the shrub component of Nachusa more fully. I do think from my reading and observation that many of the shrubs were historically present in our area in thickets or along waterways, not as single bushes dotting the prairie.
 

By Susan Kleiman
Nachusa Volunteer
September 2020

Grassland Bird Research at Nachusa Grasslands

This summer, as part of my graduate research project at Northern Illinois University, I had the opportunity of studying some of the many bird species that call Nachusa Grasslands home.

The focus of my research is to determine how birds that breed on the prairie are impacted by some of the large scale disturbances on the prairie landscape—mainly bison herbivory and prescribed fire.

I’m looking forward to analyzing the data collected this summer and preparing for next year’s field season over the next few months. I hope that my research can help provide knowledge to aid in the continued conservation of these grassland bird species.

By Antonio Del Valle
NIU MS Student​
Friends of Nachusa Grasslands Scientific Research Grant Recipient
Autumn Photo Gallery
Enjoy the autumn beauty of Nachusa Grasslands, with photos by Charles Larry and Dee Hudson.

As our website host does not provide a way to subscribe to the blog, we will periodically send you links to new posts via this PrairiE-Update newsletter.

Go to the Blog Archive for additional entries.
Copyright © 2020 Friends of Nachusa Grasslands, All rights reserved.
 

 
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8772 S. Lowden Road
Franklin Grove, IL 61031

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