Overview of Project
The preservation of local plant communities is important to maintaining the natural heritage and diversity of an area. For example, local plants and seeds are needed for replanting of prairie to roadsides and elsewhere, and roadsides provide a great place for many people to see native plants. As a first step, management and protection of native plant communities along roadsides requires information about their location.
The purpose of this project is to identify, map and mark existing native prairie along roadsides in Rice County, Minnesota. Survey work was conducted during the summer of 2000 and was initially will be based on known, mapped locations for prairie. Locations with prairie will be mapped and ranked, species identified and vouchered, and information will included as a GIS layer(s).
Funding for this survey was provided by a Minnesota Department of Natural
Resources Technical Assistance Grant obtained by the Rice County Integrated
Roadside Management Committee and grants to St. Olaf and Carleton from
the Howard Hughes Medical Institution. Cooperators included the Rice
County Highway Department, Rice County Planning and Zoning, Rice County
Soil and Water Conservation District and Natural Resources Conservation
Service, Big Woods Project, Cannon River Watershed Partnership and Minnesota
Department of Natural Resources Division of Wildlife.
Rice County Integrated Roadside
Committee
The mission of the Rice County Integrated Roadside Committee (RCIRC) is to
promote the use of integrated roadside resource
management (IRRM) by Rice County officials and landowners.
- To reduce long-term roadside maintenance costs
- to reduce soil erosion and improve water quality
- to protect plant and animal communities for future generations.
Definitions: Integrated roadside resource management (IRRM) incorporates
the use of native plant communities; economically and
environmentally sound management techniques (such as controlled burning'
spot spraying and mowing at proper times' and/or
biological and cultural controls to establish and maintain a safe, stable,
low maintenance roadside that is attractive and healthy for
all life.
Realizing that adjacent land management practices and citizen
perceptions directly effect roadside management, the primary
purpose of this committee will be education, particularly through
demonstration areas and written materials. The activities and
purpose of this committee compliment other efforts in Rice County such as
the Cannon River Watershed Project and the Cannon
Valley Big Woods group.
Rice County - On the Edge of the
Big Woods
Located in southeastern Minnesota, Rice County is a truly unique region
within the state of Minnesota, straddling the line between prairie and
forest. Prairie and forests dominated much of the land in the County until
the turn of the 19th century. The balance between forest and prairie was
largely due to fire. The presence of fire-breaks such as the Cannon and
Straight rivers and the many hills and lakes in western Rice County ensured
that not all of the area burned with the same frequency and in part explains
why forests came to dominate the western half of the County. With
the onset of Euroamerican agriculture in the 1850s, the area of native
prairie and forest have shrunk dramatically.

Prairie Survey and Future Plans
Survey work was done by Charles Umbanhowar and Ryan Haugo from St.
Olaf College and Mark McKone, Chris Martin, and Amy Purdie from Carleton
College.
We surveyed over 820 miles of County and Township rights-of-way (total for both sides of road) in southeastern Rice County and identified 56 prairie sites. These totaled 7.6 miles in length or less than 1% of the total ditches. Nearly half (23) were located in Northfield Township. Of these only six (1.1 miles) were ranked as Good to Very Good, based on ranking criteria used by the Minnesota DNR in their survey or railroad rights of way. One of the six sites has already been severely damaged due to spraying and driveway construction, highlighting that the marking and protection of at least the 6 sites ranked as good to very good is of the utmost importance if some remnant of the prairie heritage of Rice County is to be preserved. Marking of all the sites (21) ranked as Fair-Good or higher along with letters to the adjacent landowners is strongly recommended.
Contacts
If you have questions or comments please contact
one of the following:
Mr. Richard Fetterly, Rice County Integrated
Roadside, 25540 Eaton Ave S., Faribault, MN 55021, 507-334-2497
Charles Umbanhowar Jr., St. Olaf College,
ceumb@stolaf.edu
Mark McKone, Carleton College, mmckone@carleton.edu
