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Zumwalt Pine Creek facts (../files/zppinecreek_facts.pdf)
Zumwalt Pine Creek map (../files/zppinecreek_map.pdf)
Zumwalt Pine Creek photo 1 (../files/zp1_by_rmcewan.pdf)
Zumwalt Pine Creek photo 2 (../files/zp2_by_rmcewan.pdf)
Zumwalt Pine Creek photo 3 (../files/zp3_by_rmcewan.pdf)


The Nature Conservancy in Oregon Press Releases
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Stephen Anderson
Director of Communication
Phone: (503) 802-8100
E-mail: standerson@tnc.org

The Nature Conservancy prepares to expand Zumwalt Prairie Preserve

Grassland preserve is haven for birds of prey and other wildlife

Enterprise, Oregon—15 March 2006—The Nature Conservancy has signed an option to purchase 6,065 acres from a private owner to expand its Zumwalt Prairie Preserve in Northeast Oregon. With the addition, the preserve will be the largest privately owned nature sanctuary in Oregon, encompassing nearly 33,000 acres of rolling grasslands, wooded hillsides and perennial streams. (For information about public tours of Zumwalt Prairie Preserve this spring, click here.)
  
Zumwalt Prairie near Enterprise is considered the most extensive intact swath of native bunchgrass prairie in North America. It hosts one of the densest concentrations of breeding birds of prey on the continent, including golden eagles, ferruginous hawks and other raptors that raise their young on abundant ground squirrels thriving among the deep-soiled prairie grasses.

The addition to the preserve would include 13 miles of streams in the headwaters of Pine Creek, important to federally protected runs of Snake River steelhead. Rare plants on the site include the endangered Spalding’s catchfly and Wallowa needlegrass.

The property was also the last refuge of the Columbian sharp-tailed grouse before it vanished from Wallowa County in the 1940s, and is likely to play a role in ongoing efforts to reintroduce the once-common grassland bird.

“The more we learn about Zumwalt Prairie, the more excited we are about contributing to the conservation of such an extraordinary place,” said Russell Hoeflich, Oregon state director for The Nature Conservancy. “Generations of landowners before us were good stewards of the land, and today the community still cares deeply about Zumwalt Prairie. We look forward to continuing to work with our neighbors and the community to protect and restore a prairie ecosystem for future generations.”  

The Conservancy purchased its original 26,920-acre Zumwalt Prairie Preserve in October, 2000. When the adjoining purchase is completed, the preserve will total nearly 33,000 acres, equivalent to more than 51 square miles. According to the option to purchase agreement, the Conservancy has until September 29, 2006 to raise the purchase price of $3 million. The price reflects the value of the land as determined by an independent qualified real estate appraiser.
 
The Conservancy will continue to pay property taxes voluntarily in Wallowa County, although it is a tax-exempt non-profit organization. Since 2000, the Conservancy has paid $38,384 in local property taxes and $29,858 in fire patrol fees on its Zumwalt Prairie property.

 “When the community welcomed us to Wallowa County, we pledged to be a good neighbor, including paying property taxes, hiring and contracting locally, managing the land well, and contributing to the local economy,” said Phil Shephard, the Conservancy’s Northeast Oregon stewardship director. “We’ve done that; we now have more than four local full-time staff, and the preserve has a full complement of research and restoration projects, attracting many visitors, researchers and volunteers each year.”

The Conservancy contributes about $380,000 each year to the local economy in salaries, rent and supplies. In addition, it has helped raise more than $1.5 million for research and restoration work on and off the preserve, including research on nesting raptors and rare plants, control of invasive weeds, and removal of barriers to fish migration. A $500,000 federal grant to Oregon State University will be used to study the impacts of different levels of grazing on the success of ground-nesting songbirds.

The Conservancy’s local advisory board helped create a management plan for the preserve which includes biological inventory, weed management, prescribed fire and stream restoration among key actions outlined for the site. The management plan will be extended to include the new property, which will also be assessed for its potential as a “grass bank” that would provide forage for neighboring ranches while their lands are rested or slated for restoration work.

A fact sheet and map are available for download at right, as well as three stunning photos by Rick McEwan.  For a slide show of Rick McEwan's Zumwalt Prairie photos, please click here.