My last post mentioned a report on Nebraska’s first Prairie
Chicken Festival. That report has been written and submitted for publication. I
understand the report was favorably received and may appear in print next
month.
In the meantime, I urge you to visit the blog, “A Land Ethic,” alandethic.blogspot.com, for an excellent post about one of the Festival’s
Friday night performances that had meaning beyond its entertainment value
The blog’s author, Larkin Powell, Professor of Conservation
Biology and Wildlife Ecology at the University of Nebraska Lincoln, also made
presentations at the Festival. One of them addressed habitat for Prairie
Chickens in Nebraska and included reasons to be positive about Nebraska’s
Prairie Chicken population and future.
Despite his optimistic comments, the May-June issue of
Audubon magazine—in highlighting efforts being made in Missouri to preserve
prairies noted Missouri’s Prairie Chicken population may have declined 80%
from the early 1970s and may now number less than 250,000—brings home that
habitat preservation should not be taken for granted but instead, be
continually encouraged.
No comments:
Post a Comment