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GOVERNOR BLAGOJEVICH ANNOUNCES $1.4 MILLION IN
GRANTS FOR LOCAL CONSERVATION 2000 PROJECTS
September 2003
SPRINGFIELD -- Governor Rod Blagojevich today
announced more than $1.4 million in Conservation 2000 (C2000) Ecosystems
Program grants to local organizations and individuals residing within 10
Ecosystems Partnerships throughout the state. Funds will be used to acquire
interest in more than 200 acres and restore 2,000 acres of forests, wetlands
and prairie. In addition, more than 1,100 students will be educated on the
benefits of habitat restoration and protection.
The C2000 Ecosystems Program brings together the interests
and participation of local communities along watersheds-- landowners,
businesses, scientists, environmental organizations, recreational
enthusiast, and policy makers -- in a partnership to enhance and protect
watersheds through ecosystem-based management. Each partnership group is
eligible to apply for grants and technical assistance from the Department of
Natural Resources. The program has grown to 39 such partnerships, covering
82 percent of the state’s landcover.
Conservation 2000 Grants
Fox River Partnership
Counties: McHenry, Lake, Kane, Kendall, DuPage, LaSalle and Cook
Primary Contact: Becky Hoag, 630/482-9157
McHenry County Conservation District,
$42,000.00. Lawson Creek Headwater Restoration. This project will recreate
most of the original 2,500 foot meandering channel of Lawson Creek, a small
headwater tributary to Nippersink Creek, ditched in the 1940's. In addition
it will provide for the restoration of 40 acres of cropland to prairie and
enhancement of 20 acres of oak savanna north of the stream's conflux with
Nippersink Creek.
Lake County Forest Preserve District,
$30,000.00. Fish Lake Fen Habitat Restoration. This project will remove 25
acres of buckthorn thickets within a rare calcareous fen. The Lake County
Forest Preserve District will implement long-term management and monitoring
prescriptions such as controlled burning, follow-up invasive species
control, plant/animal monitoring, and volunteer recruitment.
American Bottom Partnership
Counties: Jersey, Macoupin, Madison, Monroe, Montgomery, Randolph and St.
Clair
Primary Contact: Ed Weilbacher, 618/566-4451
Southwestern Illinois RC&D, Inc., $17,810.00. Southwestern Illinois Bluff
Ecosystem Restoration. This project will facilitate exotic species removal
and brush control on at least six high quality natural areas along the bluff
ecosystem in St. Clair, Monroe and Randolph counties. Approximately 50 acres
of hill prairie/glade and forested bluff, which contains rare species found
nowhere else in the state, will benefit from the project.
Big Rivers Partnership
Counties: Calhoun, Greene, Jersey, Macoupin and Madison
Primary Contact: Alley Ringhausen, 618/498-4492
The Nature Institute, $18,888.65. Big Rivers Volunteer Stewardship
Coalition. The Nature Institute will recruit, organize and manage a network
of volunteer land stewards for the Big Rivers Ecosystem Partnership to
provide stewardship to the lands held in conservation ownership or under
conservation protection.
Cache River Partnership
Counties: Union, Johnson, Alexander, Pulaski, Pope and Massac
Primary Contact: Don Hankla, 618/833-5343
University of Illinois, $20,000.00. Effects of Hydrologic
Restoration on Birds in Bottomland Forests. This research will determine the
effects of the restoration of off-channel wetlands on the diversity,
abundance, and nesting success of birds within a bottomland forest
ecosystem. Results will increase our ability to effectively restore
hydrologic processes and manage habitat for species that depend on
functioning bottomland forests.
Friends of the Cache River, $35,000.00. Big Creek Fisheries Habitat
Restoration and Bank Stabilization Project. The project will place a series
of approximately eight riffle weirs in a reach of Big Creek in order to halt
local channel incision. Big Creek is the largest tributary stream entering
the Lower Cache River, and has been identified as a significant source of
sedimentation the Lower Cache River swamps.
Friends of the Cache River, $450,000.00. Lower Cache River
Dredging and Deep Water Habitat. The project is a joint effort between IDNR
and USFWS (Cypress Creek NWR) and Friends of the Cache River. The primary
goal of the dredging is to remove accumulated sediment from a 1.25 mile
section of the Lower Cache River in order to restore deepwater fishery
habitat, improve ecology of the river and recreational uses.
Kaskaskia River Partnership
Counties: Bond, Madison, St. Clair, Clinton, Washington, Marion and
Jefferson
Primary Contact: Larry Hasheider, 618/243-5514
Washington County SWCD, $22,000.00. Garlic Mustard Control
in the Kaskaskia. Garlic Mustard (Alliaria petiolata) is a rapidly spreading
exotic weed of forests that is displacing native species and negatively
affecting the balance of the forest ecosystem. The goal of this project is
to control and eradicate this species from the area.
Southern Illinois University, $156,105.00. Bottomland
Forest Health in the Lower Kaskaskia River Region, Years 3 and 4. This
project will continue to assess the relationship between flooding and forest
health on the Lower Kaskaskia River bottomlands, which contain the largest
contiguous tract of forested land in Illinois. Management recommendations
will be offered to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers based upon vegetation
and hydrologic data collection and analysis.
Kishwaukee River Partnership
Counties: McHenry, Boone, Winnebago, DeKalb and Ogle
Primary Contact: Jerry Paulson, 815/964-6666
Boone County Conservation District, $5,280.00. Distillery
Conservation District Restoration Project Phase 1. This project plans to
restore a native, short grass prairie of local ecotype. The prairie will
greatly improve habitat in an area where four breeding pairs of endangered
Henslow’s Sparrows were observed by an IDNR Heritage Biologist.
Natural Land Institute, $17,700.00. Clear Water Legacy
Expansion. This project will purchase a conservation easement on 11 acres of
riparian forest adjacent to the Kishwaukee River and 336-acre Clear Water
Legacy Project (016-01). The parcel is connected by the river to thousands
of acres of habitat protected by the Illinois Department of Natural
Resources and DeKalb and Winnebago County Forest Preserve Districts.
Lower Kaskaskia River Partnership
Counties: Bond, Clinton, Jackson, Macoupin, Madison, Monroe, Montgomery,
Perry, Randolph, St. Clair and Washington
Primary Contact: Norm Etling, 618/632-1406
Southwestern Illinois RC&D, Inc., $68,512.50. Southwestern
Illinois GIS Conservation Practices Tracking System. This project will
develop a seven-county GIS tracking system that will be used to record and
monitor all conservation practices on USGS DOQQs. The information will allow
resource managers and planners insight into practices that have been
implemented, their affect on the ecosystem, and areas to direct additional
conservation programs.
Prairie Parklands Partnership
Counties: Cook, Ford, Grundy, Kendall, Kankakee, LaSalle, Livingston and
Will
Primary Contact: Rita Renwick, 815/725-2934
Mazon River Watershed Planning, $3,750.00. Mazon River
Watershed Education and Outreach Effort. This project will raise the
perception level of 5th graders and the general population of the size,
scope, history, importance, and sustainability of the Mazon River Watershed.
Volunteers and stakeholders in both classroom and open forum settings will
present educational information about the river and watershed. Key
educational tools will include topographic maps and activity books.
Ducks Unlimited, Inc., $200,000.00. Dresden Island
Waterfowl Management Area. Ducks Unlimited (DU) will purchase 74 acres of
cropland along the Illinois river near Dresden Island. Following
acquisition, DU will work with other conservation partners to restore
wetland habitat on the property. Proximity of the site to the Dresden pool
of the Illinois River, Heidecke Lake and Goose Lake Prairie State Park make
it ideally suited as a waterfowl management area.
Sugar-Pecatonica Rivers Partnership
Counties: Carroll, JoDaviess, Ogle, Stephenson and Winnebago
Primary Contact: Dave Mullen, 815/629-2468
Natural Land Institute, $174,680.00. Kiser-Sugar River
Bottoms Conservation Easement. Purchase a conservation easement on 78 acres
of riparian forest and wetlands on the Sugar River will be done with this
project. This tract is part of a 1,900-acre forest within an Illinois
Natural Area Inventory site, most of which is forest preserve. The landowner
will donate an agricultural easement on 45 acres of farmland, for a
contiguous protected parcel of 123 acres.
Upper Little Wabash Partnership
Counties: Clay, Coles, Cumberland, Effingham, Fayette, Jasper, Marion and
Shelby
Primary Contact: Fred Walker, 618/548-4234
Marion County SWCD, $160,000.00. CRP Grassland Habitat Incentive Project II.
An incentive program will used to develop 750 acres of critically needed
grassland habitat on private land. The target areas are near the PRSNA in
Clay, Effingham, Fayette and Marion counties. An incentive payment of
$200.00 per acre in combination with CRP benefits will encourage private
landowners to establish the needed grassland.
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Governor announces $1.9 million in projects
for local conservation grants
Funds to be distributed across state
SPRINGFIELD – Governor Rod R.
Blagojevich today announced more than $1.9 million in grants to local units
of government, education, environmental and conservation organizations
through the Conservation 2000 (C2000) Ecosystems Program.
The grants, awarded through 26 Ecosystem Partnerships located in all parts
of the state, will be used to help restore more than 4,800 acres of forest,
prairie and wetland habitat and acquire interest in more than 230 acres of
land for conservation purposes. In addition, the grants will enable more
than 13,000 students to participate in educational programs and projects
focusing on the benefits of habitat restoration and protection.
"From restoring prairie grasses and stabilizing streambanks to developing
educational programs that benefit thousands of students, the projects
supported by these grants will have long term benefits for the wildlife,
plants and watershed resources in all parts of Illinois,” the Governor said.
“The C2000 grant program helps local citizens and organizations improve
environmental quality and the quality of life in their communities.”
The C2000 Ecosystems Program coordinates the interests and participation of
local communities, landowners, businesses, scientists, environmental
organizations, outdoor recreation enthusiasts, and policy makers to enhance
and protect watersheds through ecosystem-based management. At the heart of
the program are Ecosystem Partnerships, coalitions of local citizens who
share a common interest in the natural resources of their communities. There
are a total 39 partnerships in watersheds that account for 82 percent of the
state’s land area.
Over the span of the program, the C2000 Ecosystems Program has awarded more
than $28.7 million in grants, leveraging an additional $31.5 million in
local matching funds and in-kind contributions for a total of $60.2 million
for more than 700 projects throughout the state. The program has assisted in
restoring more than 62,000 acres of habitat, while more than 6,200 acres
have been acquired or placed in conservation easements to provide long term
protection. Education programs regarding habitat enhancement have included
participation by more than 400,000 citizens and school children.
For more information on the C2000 Ecosystems Program, contact the Illinois
Department of Natural Resources, One Natural Resources Way, Springfield, IL
62702-1271, phone 217/782-7940, http://dnr.state.il.us/orep/c2000/ecosystem.
A list of Conservation 2000 Ecosystems Program grants and project
descriptions is below.
CONSERVATION 2000 ECOSYSTEMS PROGRAM GRANTS
Carlyle Lake Partnership
Counties: Montgomery, Bond, Marion, Clinton, Fayette, Effingham, Christian
and Shelby
Contact: John Phillips, 618/283-1095 ext. 3
Ballard Nature Center, Altamont, $28,200.
Natural Communities Restoration at Ballard Nature
Center. This project will restore the natural
communities at the Ballard Nature Center, including upland forests, riparian
corridors, prairies, savannas, mesic floodplain forests, and shallow water
wetlands. The work will include exotic species control, woody encroachment
control, reintroduction of prescribed fire and increasing species diversity.
Chicago Wilderness Partnership
Counties: McHenry, DuPage, Cook, Will and Lake
Primary Contact: Rebecca Blazer, 312/346-2540 ext. 2137
Northeastern Illinois Planning Commission,
$68,718.12. Northeastern Illinois Natural
Resources Outreach and Technical Assistance. This
project will provide assistance to Chicago Wilderness and the 10 other
Ecosystem Partnerships in northeastern Illinois, principally in the form of
technical assistance and outreach to local governments. It will address
issues related to the impacts of development and redevelopment on land and
water resources, continuing an ongoing C2000 project.
Driftless Area Partnership
Counties: Jo Daviess and Carroll
Primary Contact: Rich Mattas, 815/777-2688
The Prairie Enthusiasts, $140,045. Roberts Restoration Project.
The Prairie Enthusiasts (TPE) will acquire fee simple title to 45 acres,
which they will restore to tall grass prairie. Following restoration an
easement on the land will be donated to Natural Land Institute. The property
is adjacent to TPE's Hanley Savanna and within the area of concern for the
ongoing Hanover Bluffs Restoration Project. This acquisition will further
establish a natural corridor connecting Lost Mound National Wildlife Refuge
with Hanover Bluffs.
DuPage River Coalition Partnership
Counties: Cook, DuPage, Kane, Kendall and Will
Primary Contact: Dan Lobbes, 630/428-4500 ext. 55
The Conservation Foundation, $26,520.
Lake Renwick East Habitat Restoration.
The goal of the eight-acre project is to complete the
restoration of a wetland/prairie complex to serve as foraging and breeding
habitat for the state endangered Black-crowned Night Heron, recently
de-listed Great Egret, Pied-Billed Grebe, Little Blue Heron, and Snowy
Egret, as well as other wildlife with similar habitat requirements.
Fox River Partnership
Counties: McHenry, Lake, Kane, Kendall, DuPage, LaSalle and Cook
Primary Contact: Becky Hoag, 630/482-9157
Kane County Forest
Preserve District, $50,000. Nelson Lake Marsh -
Restoration & Education.
Funds will be utilized to complete a 20-acre
wetland/fen enhancement at Nelson Lake, a 1,000-acre dedicated nature
preserve. The project will include specialized contractors, equipment for
tree removal, nonnative species removal, continuing seed harvesting by
students and volunteers, planting and removal of buckthorn from under the
oak trees. Interpretive signs will also be installed.
Headwaters Partnership
Counties: Ford, Champaign and Douglas
Primary Contact: Leon Wendte, 217/352-3536
Urbana Park District, $49,986.
Judge Weber Park Wet Prairie Restoration.
Urbana Park District will restore 22 acres of critical wet
prairie on existing floodplain soils of the Saline Branch. The project will
create habitat for waterfowl and other wildlife, absorb urban storm water
runoff, and filter and recharge groundwater in northeast Urbana. The area
will be used for conservation and environmental programs.
Heart of the Sangamon Partnership
Counties: DeWitt, Macon, and Piatt.
Primary Contact: Paul Marien, 217/423-7708
Illinois Audubon Society, $316,855.
Conservation of Jasmine Hollow Natural Area, Piatt County.
This project will conserve about 139 acres of
forest and riparian habitat along the Sangamon River at Jasmine Hollow
Natural Area. The conservation easement, through an Illinois Land and Water
Reserve, will protect the land from adverse uses including development,
clear-cutting and conversion to other land uses.
Illinois River Bluffs Partnership
Counties: Bureau, Fulton, Knox, LaSalle, Lee, Marshall, Peoria, Putnam,
Stark, Tazewell and Woodford
Primary Contact: David Meisenheimer, 815/875-8732
Fondulac Park District, $57,372.60.
Spring Creek Forest Restoration and Student-Based Monitoring.
Two hundred acres of forested bluff owned by
Fondulac Park District will undergo ecological restoration to improve ground
cover and prevent erosion of sediment into Spring Creek. Students from local
high schools and colleges will conduct geological and biological monitoring
on the study area and all data will be digitized with GIS.
Peoria Park District, $102,000. Singing Woods Ecological
Restoration Project. The Peoria Park District will implement an
ecological restoration project resulting in stabilization of bluff erosion
and enhancement of populations of rare native plant and animal species and
their associated habitats. This project builds upon successful best
management practices to address the unique ecological problems that occur at
Singing Woods.
Kankakee River Partnership
Counties: Ford, Iroquois, Kankakee, Vermilion and Will
Primary Contact: J.R. Black, 815/932-8341
Beecher High School, $70,000.
Beecher Trim Creek Bank Stabilization-Conservation Education
Project. Beecher High School, the Village of
Beecher, and the Washington Township Drainage Commission will work to
provide streambank stabilization of Trim Creek from Penfield Street to
Miller Street using native Illinois plants and best management practices in
maintaining the stream corridor.
Kishwaukee River Partnership
Counties: McHenry, Boone, Winnebago, DeKalb and Ogle
Primary Contact: Nathan Hill, 815/544-1576
McHenry County Conservation Foundation, $56,028.
Pleasant Grove Savanna and Prairie Restoration.
This project will provide funding to restore 70
acres of lowland prairie, sedge meadow, dry gravel hill prairie, and oak
savanna along the southern and eastern portions of MCCD's Pleasant Valley
Conservation Area. Directly adjacent to an Illinois Natural Areas Inventory
site, this project will expand upon extensive restoration work completed
during the last 10 years.
LaMoine River Partnership
Counties: Adams, Brown, Fulton, Hancock, Henderson, McDonough, Schuyler and
Warren
Primary Contact: Martha Sheppard, 217/285-4114
Hancock County Soil and Water Conservation
District, $5,260. Tree Planter for
Reforestation of Hancock County. The Hancock
County SWCD will purchase a tree planter to reduce soil erosion and improve
water quality. Many acres of the LaMoine River watershed have been enrolled
in tree planting programs and a tree planter will ensure that the trees are
planted in a timely manner.
Hancock County Soil and Water Conservation
District, $31,895. Tom Hosack Permanent
Watershed Protection Easement. The Hancock County
SWCD will place 50 acres of bottomland forest and associated uplands in
permanent easement. The addition of this property will link several hundred
acres of permanent easement Conservation Reserve Enhancement Program and
Conservation Reserve Program acres together to create an unbroken wildlife
corridor.
Lower Des Plaines Partnership
Counties: Cook, DuPage and Will
Primary contact: Gary Mechanic, 773/267-0146
Corporation for Open Lands, $25,000. Bartel Grassland Restoration
Planting. In cooperation with the Forest Preserve District of Cook
County, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, National Audubon Society and
Northeastern Illinois University, CorLands will purchase and install native
grasses and forbs. Prairie restoration will occur at the 375-acre Bartel
Grassland, an Illinois Natural Areas Inventory site.
Lower Rock River Partnership
Counties: Lee, Whiteside, Rock Island, Henry, Bureau, Ogle and Carroll
Primary Contact: Don Swensson, 309/762-5417
Lee County Soil and Water Conservation District,
$10,500. Ryan Wetland and Sand Prairie
Restoration. The Ryan Wetland and Sand Prairie,
owned by the Lee County SWCD, provides critical habitat for state-listed and
other area-sensitive species. The site is degraded by invasive tree and
brush growth. This project will restore rare prairie and wetland resources
by invasive species removal, seed harvesting and prescribed burning.
Lower Sangamon Valley Partnership
Counties: Cass, Christian, Logan, McLean, Macon, Macoupin, Mason, Menard,
Montgomery, Morgan, Sangamon, Shelby and Tazewell
Primary Contact: Eric Golden, 217/632-7590 ext. 3
Friends of the Sangamon Valley, $31,050.
Reforestation of Gurgen Park, Springfield.
Friends of the Sangamon Valley will restore 55 acres of old
floodplain fields in Gurgen Park, providing a connection to adjacent
forested lands. Bur Oak, Black Walnut, Kentucky Coffee Tree and other
hardwood species will be utilized to complete the restoration.
Menard County Soil and Water Conservation District, $28,375.
Clary-Little Grove Creek Hill Prairie Restoration. This project will
restore 25 acres of degraded hill prairie within the larger Clary Creek
watershed and to ensure continued prosperity of the populations of three
state listed endangered species. The project requires the removal of
encroaching woody vegetation and the planting of suitable seed on
approximately 25 acres to help ensure the survival of these rare
communities.
Menard County Soil and Water Conservation District, $9,000.
Baugher Savanna Restoration. This project will re-create a 15-acre
savanna through the removal of selected sub-canopy and undesirable woody
species and prescribed burning. Many savanna indicators are present on site
such as large open grown trees and a diverse herbaceous ground cover of
prairie species.
Mackinaw River Partnership
Counties: Ford, Livingston, McLean, Mason, Tazewell and Woodford
Primary Contact: Mary Jo Adams, 309/438-5955
The Nature Conservancy, $274,525. Ecological
and Economic Benefits of Conservation Based BMPs in the Mackinaw River
Watershed. The Nature Conservancy will implement
conservation-based best management practices and other innovative practices
on a 272-acre farm in the Mackinaw River watershed to reduce nutrient
exports into adjacent aquatic ecosystems. Data collected over two-and-a-half
years will be used to demonstrate economic and ecological benefits of these
land management practices to farmers and landowners.
Mississippi Western Five Partnership
Counties: Henderson, Henry, Knox, Mercer and Warren
Primary Contact: Robert Yarde, 309/482-6100
Warren County Soil and Water Conservation District,
$8,626. Streambank Inventory on Cedar Creek.
This project will identify streambank erosion and instability along Cedar
Creek within the Mississippi Western Five watershed. GIS and GPS will be
used to locate and measure eroding banks in cropland and pastureland along
Cedar Creek. A summary report and maps with locations identified will be
part of the finished product.
Rock River Partnership
Counties: Ogle
Primary Contact: Robert Vogl, 815/732-7332
Byron Forest Preserve District, $62,121.
Invasive Woody Vegetation Removal in the Rock River Partnership.
Funds will be used for mechanical removal of exotic and native woody
vegetation in natural areas throughout the Rock River Partnership. They will
also help to restore the native landscape of prairies, wetlands and oak
savannas, and to develop healthier natural communities.
Shawnee Ecosystem Partnership
Counties: Hardin, Johnson, Massac, Pope and Saline
Primary Contact: Grover Webb, 618/683-2651
Pope-Hardin Soil and Water Conservation District, $89,716.
Riparian Buffer Incentive Program. The Pope-Hardin SWCD will identify
landowners and provide them with information and financial assistance to
establish and protect riparian forest buffers at least 100 feet wide along
seasonal and perennial streams to improve water quality, bank stability,
recreational opportunities, and fish and wildlife habitat.
Southern Illinois University, $29,935.80.
Oak Ecosystem Restoration and Maintenance in Southern
Illinois. This restoration and habitat management
project will demonstrate the effects of partial cutting and prescribed
burning on oak-hickory forests of southern Illinois. SIU will be restoring
these forests to their pre-settlement condition through thinning unwanted
species and understory burning to develop oak-hickory regeneration and
permit maintenance of oak-hickory on each site.
Sinkhole Plain Partnership
Counties: Monroe, Randolph and St. Clair
Primary Contact: Art Ritter, 618/939-4256
Sinkhole Plain Ecosystem Partnership, $15,000.
Exotic Species Control Stemler Cave Woods
Natural Area. This project will eradicate exotic
species in Stemler Cave Woods Natural Area by cutting and spraying during
dormant and growing seasons. Bush honeysuckle is the predominant invasive
and is seriously degrading this high quality forest.
Spoon River Partnership
Counties: Bureau, Fulton, Henry, Knox, McDonough, Marshall, Peoria, Stark
and Warren
Primary Contact: David King, 309/833-4747
Farmington Central Community Unit School District
#265, $66,755. Farmington CUSD #265 Habitat
Creation. Farmington Central CUSD #265 will create
more than 30 acres of habitat on previously farmed land. This project is
part of the 103 acres being used to construct a new K-12 school. The
property will also offer students additional outdoor environmental
educational opportunities, and provide for erosion and sediment control.
Sugar-Pecatonica Rivers Partnership
Counties: Carroll, JoDaviess, Ogle, Stephenson and Winnebago
Primary Contact: Dave Mullen, 815/629-2468
Ecological Services, $69,275. Survey to identify significant
wildlands in the Sugar-Pecatonica Rivers Area. Ecological Services will
identify wildlands of local, regional and statewide significance in the
Sugar-Pecatonica Rivers Area. Sites will be identified primarily by
interpreting infrared aerial photography. The survey will support efforts to
protect and restore natural lands and waters.
Upper Des Plaines Partnership
Counties: Lake, DuPage and Cook
Primary Contact: Lydia Scott, 847/883-8600
Lake County Forest Preserve District, $97,500. Ethel's Woods
Savanna and Wetland Restoration Project. This project will provide
critical expansion of savanna and wetland communities around a 185-acre
block of intact oak woodlands that provide important habitat for forest
interior bird species. It also provides for the protection and restoration
of headwater wetland communities and amphibian habitat associated with Mill
Creek.
Land Conservancy of Lake County, Inc., $15,670. Wetland
Enhancement at Pohickory Nature Preserve. LCLC will enhance a 4.3-acre
fen wetland and 2.5-acre upland buffer by controlling exotic weeds and
shrubs through cutting, herbiciding and burning during a three-year period.
Plantings of prairie plugs and seeds will be used to increase plant quality
and wildlife habitat for this rare ecosystem in northeastern Illinois.
Upper Little Wabash Partnership
Counties: Clay, Coles, Cumberland, Effingham, Fayette, Jasper, Marion and
Shelby
Primary Contact: Fred Walker, 618/548-4234
Illinois Audubon Society, $9,095.
Interpretive Programs at Prairie Ridge State Natural Area.
The Illinois Audubon Society will provide interpretive programs at Prairie
Ridge State Natural Area, focusing on rare grassland birds. The project will
highlight the need for increasing critical habitat for these species.
Upper Rock River
Counties: Boone, Stephenson and Winnebago
Primary contact: Bruce Olson, 815/636-2671
Roscoe Township, $42,188.50.
Kinnikinnick Creek Prairie Restoration.
This project will restore a permanently protected, 21-acre tract of
floodplain and dry prairie along the Stone Bridge Nature Trail. This
restoration will protect the water quality of South Kinnikinnick Creek and
enhance prairie that spans over the property with Bull’s coral-drops and a
neighboring designated natural area with threatened prairie brush-clover.
Vermilion River Partnership
Counties: Vermilion and Iroquois
Primary contact: Kevin Green, 217/442-8511
Vermilion County Soil and Water Conservation
District, $17,650. Plotting Habitat Progress on
the Prairie. Illinois' only National Scenic River,
the North Fork of the Vermilion River, is home to several designated natural
areas. Grant funds will be utilized to assess and analyze threatened and
endangered species by using GIS/GPS technology. Results will be used to
implement IDNR recommended conservation for high-risk areas.
Vermilion Watershed Task Force Partnership
Counties: Ford, Iroquois, LaSalle, Livingston, Marshall, McLean and Woodford
Primary contact: Bob Lawless, 815/692-4433
Livingston County Soil and Water Conservation
District, $2,200. Connecting With Nature While
Having Fun. The SWCD will host its 7th
Conservation EXPO, attended by more than 2,200 students in grades 1-5.
Individual classrooms rotate to grade appropriate activities. Every student
also attends a main event program. This grant will fund four main event
programs, presented by a naturalist and educator. |