Prairie Cluster Prototype Program Overview

Prairie Cluster Map

North American prairie once extended across the mid-continent region from Canada to Texas and from the Rocky Mountains to the Appalachian forest. The vast landscape was nearly continuous grassland, transitioning gradually from shortgrass steppe in the west to tallgrass prairie and savanna in the east.

 Today, Great Plains grasslands are fundamentally altered by the conversion of prairie to cropland and pasture, the removal or disappearance of native ungulates, drainage of wetlands, and an increase in woody vegetation through plantings and fire suppression.

Estimates of the loss of native prairie range between 80% and 99.9%, with the largest estimated losses for tallgrass prairie and oak savanna. Fragmentation of the tallgrass prairie ecosystem has left our national parks with a unique challenge to help preserve remnants of this nearly vanished habitat.

The goal of the Prairie Cluster I&M Program is to design and implement long-term monitoring for seven park areas in the Midwest:

Six of the parks in the Prairie Cluster are relatively small, historic parks. Until recently, the native prairie and savanna vegetation of these parks has primarily been treated as a backdrop for interpreting each park’s cultural significance. Restoration of prairie and savanna communities was undertaken mainly to recreate historic landscapes. More recently, the contribution of these remnant grasslands to regional biodiversity has been recognized. The seventh park in the Prairie Cluster, Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve, was recently created with the legislative purpose to preserve the tallgrass prairie ecosystem.

While each park has a unique mission and represents a distinctive component of regional biotic diversity, these parks share many natural resource management issues. All include high-quality prairie remnants, sites requiring complete restoration, and a continuum of resource conditions between these two extremes. The two most eastern parks, Wilson’s Creek NB and Effigy Mounds NM are also managing oak savanna remnants. Restoring prairie/savanna vegetation to disturbed sites and managing grassland communities with prescribed fire are common resource management priorities.

The small size of the parks makes them particularly susceptible to external threats. Agricultural, residential and industrial development are prominent land uses adjacent to these parks. Because small parks are often inadequately buffered against edge effects, invasion by exotic plant species is a pervasive problem. Water pollution is also an urgent external threat. Because the parks are small, their springs, creeks and ground water are particularly vulnerable to external pollution sources, and cannot be insulated by buffer zones or resource management inside the parks. Most of the parks must also protect unique habitats and manage state or federally listed, rare and endangered species.

Documents that summarize our program are available for download using the links below.

 
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