CANCELLED because of site flooding
Nature Conservancy Will Hold Canebreak Planting Day
Saturday, March 29, Near Van Buren
ST. LOUIS — March 25, 2008 — The Nature Conservancy is holding a project day to restore the native canebrakes along bottom-land sections of the Current River. This all-day project will involve participants using shovels to dig up and re-plant cane, moving cane from pickup truck to trailer, pruning the cane with loppers to a more manageable height and flagging planted cane for future identification.
Date: Saturday, March 29, 2008
Time: 9:30 a.m. - 3 p.m.
What to wear/to bring: Appropriate clothing for the weather conditions and for working in the field. Please bring your lunch and work gloves. Snacks and all other tools will be provided.
RSVP: Helpful but not required. Neal Humke, Ozarks preserves manager, (573) 323-8790, nhumke@tnc.org
Where: Meet at 9:30 am at the Missouri Ozarks Nature Conservancy Office, 504 Main Street, Van Buren, carpool to the restoration site.
Background: Giant cane, Missouri’s only native bamboo, once grew in huge stand in the river bottoms of southern Missouri. Some of these stands covered several square miles and were rich in wildlife. The earliest European settlers in southern Missouri discovered that cane made excellent fodder for livestock and the cane quickly disappeared. Only about two percent of the original cane coverage remains intact today.
Canebrakes were home to a wide variety of game and other wildlife. Woodcock, swamp rabbit, songbirds, butterflies, small mammals and reptiles were abundant in canebrakes. Swainson’s warbler, a rare songbird that has been declining in numbers, needs canebrakes for nesting habitat.
Canebrakes also help stabilize stream banks, increase water quality and protect gravel spawning beds of numerous fish and other aquatic species from being suffocated by eroded soil.
The Nature Conservancy is a leading conservation organization working around the world to protect ecologically important lands and waters for nature and people. To date, the Conservancy and its more than one million members have been responsible for the protection of more than 15 million acres in the United States and have helped preserve more than 102 million acres in Latin America, the Caribbean, Asia and the Pacific. Visit The Nature Conservancy on the Web at www.nature.org.
Together with our members and conservation partners, The Nature Conservancy in Missouri has protected more than 138,000 acres of critical natural lands since 1956. Visit us on the Web at nature.org/missouri.
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