By Lisa Eller, director of communications
And as
she goes on to describe the challenges of restoration, I start to imagine that plot
as a tiny piece of a vast landscape and I begin to grasp the monumental task we
face in protecting and restoring the sagebrush steppe ecosystem across Idaho
and the rest of the Great Basin.
This is
just one of the many eye-opening moments I have had since starting the Idaho Master Naturalist program in January. The program aims to create a
well-educated group of volunteers. For a minimal cost, participants meet every
week over five months and learn about a number of natural resource topics. Participants
agree to share their new knowledge working as volunteers at the Foothills
Learning Center, the Idaho Botanical Garden and other locations around Boise.
The
experience has deepened my understanding and appreciation for the work of my
colleagues at the Conservancy and other groups dedicated to conserving,
preserving, protecting and studying our natural environment in Idaho.
During
the lesson with Ann, she also showed us an area near the greenhouse where she
is propagating native plants from seed the garden collects, to support the
Bureau of Land Management's rangeland restoration efforts. Master naturalists
have assisted with this effort since the program began in Boise.
After the
master naturalist lesson, I make a point to visit with our Director of Science, Dr.
Bob Unnasch, who has dedicated part of his career with the Conservancy to
figuring out ways to save the sagebrush steppe we have left and to restore what
we have lost.
“What
are we going to do? How do you stay optimistic?” I ask.
“I don’t
know what the answer is,” he replies. “But a monoculture of cheatgrass is
something I will not accept.”
We
laugh.
The rapid loss of sagebrush steppe seems overwhelming at times, especially during fire season — 2,720,761 acres have burned in Owyhee and Twin Falls Counties since 1984.
But we remain optimistic and we move forward, supporting policy, conducting restoration and turning to science for options. This past year, our team in Idaho has dedicated much of their time to conserving the sagebrush steppe:
Our Director
of Government Relations, Will Whelan, was a key member of Idaho's Sage Grouse
Task Force, advocating for the state's investment in long-term and short-term
solutions to the threats facing the grouse and the habitat.
Art
Talsma, our director of stewardship and restoration, has spent the past several
years collaborating with landowners and land managers to restore sagebrush
steppe in the Owyhee Canyonlands, an area that contains some of the most intact
sagebrush ecosystems in Idaho.
Bob,
along with Nathan Welch, our spatial analyst, have spent a good part of the
last six months immersed in a project to model fire across the northern Great
Basin. Their goal is to create a tool that land managers can use to create
strategic fuel-breaks that can help stem the spread of the massive rangeland
fires we have experienced in the last few years and to protect those remaining
areas harboring the best and most important sagebrush steppe habitat.
...
Though
much attention has been paid recently to the importance of sagebrush steppe
(sometimes referred to as rangelands) to sage-grouse survival, it is important
for so many other reasons, for both wildlife and people.
The
sagebrush steppe is a uniquely Western landscape, an enduring feature of our
natural and cultural heritage.
For some
families, the sagebrush steppe is the place where generations have made their
lives and earned their livelihoods. For some scientists, it is a place of study
and a potential source for medicine.
For
others, myself included, it is a place of beauty and serenity. Because
sagebrush steppe attracts so much life, it truly enriches the countless hours
we spend enjoying the outdoors.
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