MISSOURI Prescribed burn promotes wildlife habitat across public land in Ozarks

Bird Dog & Retriever News

April/ May 2012 issue page 43


 

MISSOURI Prescribed burn promotes wildlife habitat across public land in Ozarks

Where there’s smoke, there’s fire, and there was a lot of smoke over more than 4,000 acres of public land in the Ozarks March 26. A cooperative prescribed burn was used as a vegetation-management tool by the Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC), The Nature Conservancy (TNC) and the National Park Service (NPS).

According to Fire Communication and Education Specialist Dena Matteson of the Ozark National Scenic Riverways (ONSR), 4,010 acres of public land were managed by the landscape-sized burn. Known landmarks involved in the burn included Peck Ranch Conservation Area (CA) and Stegall Mountain, Thorny Mountain and Rocky Falls.

“A prescribed fire of this size mimics the area’s historic fire pattern and reestablishes habitats those fires created and maintained,” said Preston Mabry, area manager at Peck Ranch CA.

Native Americans are known to have burned the area long ago to manage the land. Now, all three agencies have a shared history of using prescribed burns to manage vegetation and wildlife habitat. The first TNC and MDC cooperative burn on Thorny Mountain occurred in 1998, but the two agencies have worked together on prescribed burns in Missouri for more than two decades. TNC has worked extensively with MDC in the prairie regions of the state at places such as Dunn Ranch in northwest Missouri and Wah’ Kon-Tah Prairie in southwest Missouri. This work has included controlled burning, native seed harvest and prairie restoration, and wildlife work with prairie chickens and bison reintroductions.

“Working with other agencies allows us to not only share the workload, it enables us to manage habitat on a landscape level,” Mabry said.

A larger, landscape-scale burn is preferred in areas wherever possible because the fire is able to vary across the land with the amount and type of fuel loads such as leaf litter, grass and woody logging debris. Some sections burn more intensely, some less and some not at all. The result is a mosaic of burned landscape that ensures a variety of habitats.

MDC began using the technique more than 30 years ago on Peck Ranch CA. The area was one of the first sites for landscape-sized (approximately 1,000 acres or more) prescribed burns on the state’s diverse Ozarks terrain of forest, hills, valleys and glades.

On this recent, much larger scale burn, all three agencies joined to manage approximately 11 miles of fireline. Eight miles of fireline were within the boundaries of Peck Ranch CA, causing a temporary closure of the burn area to the public during these activities.

Aerial ignition burning was used, according to Mabry, because it allowed area managers to safely light the fire from above and spread it over a larger area. Staff on the ground managed firelines that encompassed the area of the burn.

“These firelines are prepped manually with chainsaws, blowers and hand crews with the objective to move any large fuel away from the firelines,” said Mabry. “Removing standing dead trees close to the fireline helps keep the fire within our prescribed boundaries.”

According to Director of Fire Management Blane Heuman with TNC, approximately 105 acres of the Conservancy’s Thorny Mountain nature preserve were included in the prescribed burn. An additional 895 acres of TNC and MDC lands adjacent to the larger 4,000-acre burn were already successfully burned over the winter months. That burn on the southwest face of Thorny Mountain was completed under the direction of a TNC “Burn Boss” and staffed with experienced teams from TNC’s fire program in Arkansas, from MDC and from the NPS.

“This area of black, already burned leaf litter and grass fuels served as the northeast boundary of the larger planned burn on Monday, improving the safety of the larger fire operation,” Heuman said.

According to Acting Superintendent of ONSR Bill Black, maintaining healthy fire-dependent glades and woodlands is essential for stabilizing wildlife populations that depend on these habitats, and will improve the public’s opportunity to enjoy a wide variety of wildlife.

“The NPS is proud to work in cooperation with Missouri Department of Conservation and The Nature Conservancy in order to maximize safety and efficiency while accomplishing a project of this magnitude,” said Black. “In addition, prescribed burning will help reduce the accumulation of hazardous fuels and therefore reduce the likelihood of a catastrophic wildfire in the future.”

Waterfowl say it’s spring as they head north

A bonanza for wildlife watchers is at hand as hundreds of thousands of snow geese and other waterfowl are stopping at wetlands and lakes as they head north to summer breeding grounds.

“We’re right in the peak of the snow goose migration,” said Andy Raedeke, a waterfowl biologist for the Missouri Department of Conservation (MDC).

Snow goose numbers at the Squaw Creek National Wildlife Refuge near Mound City increased from 173,000 on Feb. 21 to almost 800,000 on Feb. 28, according to the refuge’s weekly waterfowl counts.

Besides the refuge, migrating geese and ducks, shorebirds and songbirds can be seen at MDC conservation areas. The Cooley Lake Conservation Area in Clay County and the Little Bean Marsh Conservation Area in Platte County are within the Kansas City metro area. But wetlands in the rural areas of northwest and west central Missouri also attract migrants, such as the Nodaway Valley Conservation Area in Holt and Andrew counties, or the Four Rivers Conservation Area in Bates and Vernon counties.

Visit the mdc.mo.gov website for locations, directions and descriptions of conservation areas.

Geese are among the first birds to head north once the days lengthen and a warming period arrives, Raedeke said. Ducks, shorebirds and songbirds will follow with the peak times to see migrating wetland birds from now into April.

The snow geese usually head north during a February warm up, he said. But the snow and bitter cold that lingered this winter delayed the peak snow goose migration to early March. It’s warming up now though and waterfowl are on the move.

“Right now is a good time to watch spring migration,” Raedeke said. “Sometimes I like to go to the marsh and put out some decoys, because it’s just fun to watch the ducks.”

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