Wet
and Wild in Iowa's Fens by Bill Witt
Like countless workers
the world over, Rebecca Kauten likes to display a picture of her
"kid" on her desk at work. And in common with other
parents, she recognizes her namesake is a complex individual that
deserves the right to be itself: by turns gentle, beautiful, bouncy,
always growing, surprising, stubborn: "You can't really make
comparisons with anything else-it just doesn't like to be pigeonholed."
Kauten laughingly
refers to her "kid" as "it" because the picture
beside her computer screen smiles with flowers, ferns and endangered
plants. It's a fen-a rare, highly specialized kind of wetland.
"Becky's Fen,"
as it's officially called, has flourished on what's now her parents'
farm south of Fayette for an estimated 5,000 years ("pretty
old to us-but still young as far as Mother Nature's concerned,"
Kauten says). The name is a loving tribute to a daughter's persistence
in persuading her father to protect and permanently preserve it.
What is a fen?
Fens are
places where mineral-rich groundwater flows out onto the land
surface, creating, in the words of John
Pearson of the Iowa Department of Natural Resources (DNR),
"constantly saturated, but not flooded, habitats." People
often confuse bogs and marshes with fens, Pearson explains, but
while marshes are often flooded, with pools of stagnant water,
"Fen waters are spring-fed and always flowing, at least beneath
the surface of the peat or muck substrate."
In addition to steady
outflows of groundwater, fens are typically found on hillsides
and terraces of streams or rivers-in association with deep deposits
of "muck-type" soils, usually Palms or occasionally
Houghton, muck.
Fen survey
These two
common denominators enabled Pearson and his DNR colleague, botanist
Mark Leoschke,
to use soil maps and aerial photos to identify possible sites
when they began what they "naively thought would be a one-
or two-year survey" of Iowa's fens. That was in 1986, and
at the time only a handful of fens had been located and studied,
along the western margins of the Des Moines Lobe landform of northwest
Iowa and the Iowan Surface landform of eastern Iowa.
Although their survey
activity peaked around 1991, Pearson and Leoschke are still at
it today. Using soil surveys, they identified 1000 potential fen
sites. By studying aerial photos, they found that 40% of these
sites were destroyed and another 30% were mostly destroyed or
too small to merit further study. They field-checked the remaining
300+ sites and found about 25 "good" fens, plus another
60 or 70 that still contain some high-quality native plants.
Fens as refuges
Intact fens'
scarcity, coupled with their usually small size and unique soil
and water characteristics, make them refuges for some of Iowa's
rarest plants and animals, Leoschke notes. Among the over 200
plant species found on fens, about five percent are listed as
threatened and endangered.
Species associated
with fens include Kalm's lobelia, Grass of Parnassus, Hooded ladies
tresses and Spring ladies tresses, Small bladderwort, Fringed
gentian, Bog bean, Beaked rush, Whorled nut rush, Arrow grass,
Bog willow, Sage willow, and Bog birch.
Numerous species of butterflies and moths call fens home, including
the strikingly beautiful, and rare, Baltimore checkerspot. Fens
and their margins also provide nesting and feeding habitat for
such birds as sedge wrens, snipe and sora rails, as well as Iowa's
most popular game bird, the ring-necked pheasant.
Western vs. Eastern
Iowa fens
Continuing
research has revealed that eastern, or Iowan Surface, fens may
differ in several ways from Des Moines Lobe fens. The Iowan fens
are considered younger by hundreds or thousands of years, which
may account for their lack of distinct zones of specialized plant
growth. The geology of the western Iowa fens contributes to their
"steady" rates of moisture recharge and discharge, regardless
of rainfall, while their eastern Iowa cousins' water flows tend
to be more sensitive to rain and drought patterns.
Differing mineral
concentrations of the eastern and western fens' waters may also
help account for distinct variation in about 20 percent of the
plant species between the two types. The net result is that eastern
Iowa fens harbor 22 species of trees and shrubs, while western
fens have only 2. Eastern fens also feature a number of broad-leaved,
non-woody plants (forbs) that are absent or rare in western fens,
including Marsh and Sensitive ferns, Swamp saxifrage, and Marsh
marigold.
Forested Fens
Soil maps
have led researchers to hundreds of so-called "prairie fens."
However, John Pearson notes this method doesn't help pinpoint
the least-studied fens, those that occur in forests. "Those
super-saturated muck soils just aren't mapped when they're under
tree cover," he explains. Of the handful of forested fens
that have been identified, the best-known is Hanging Bog in Linn
County, which features carpets of Impatiens, Marsh marigold, and
Skunk cabbage in its discharge zone at the base of a small bluff.
"The hanging
bogs, or forested fens, need a lot more study," Pearson says,
"but we usually won't know about a forest fen unless somebody
tells us it's there. That means we need landowners and other interested
people to guide us-and we hope they will!"
Saving a fen
Rebecca Kauten
was "nine or ten" she recalls, when she signed on as
one of Pearson's and Loeschke's allies in the effort to save Iowa's
fens. "My dad was pretty frustrated with 'that big wet spot,'"
she says. "It kept sucking down tractor wheels when he drove
too close. He couldn't plow it, couldn't grow anything on it.
He kept scheming ways to try and get rid of it. And the fen kept
finding ways of defeating him."
And then, "One
day John (Pearson) and Mark (Leoschke) showed up and asked if
they could take a look at it. My dad and I went out with them,
and they got excited, pointing out all the neat things they were
finding."
The site visits continued,
and as young Becky listened in on the botanists' reports to her
father, she was inspired to "go out and study for myself
what they were talking about." And as her knowledge and enthusiasm
for the fen deepened, her father's skepticism and frustration
softened. Finally, after about four or five years of scientific
reports and daughterly persuasion, he called in the Fayette County
Conservation Board (FCCB) to help draw up a permanent conservation
easement. The terms keep ownership in the Kauten family, while
DNR holds the easement and FCCB is the land management partner.
A state Resource Enhancement and Protection (REAP) grant helped
fund the project, finalized in 1994.
"Dad's attitude
completely changed," Rebecca Kauten says. "He came to
think of his old nemesis as something that's rare and precious,
and that we're privileged to own and protect. Now we'll go visit
other people's fens, and it's like the farmers driving the back
roads, checking the neighbors' fields for weeds and straight rows-except
my dad will walk around on this new fen for a while and then he'll
lean over and whisper, 'This one's OK, but we've got a lot better
stuff growing on ours.'"
Want
to learn more about Iowa's fens?
The original magazine
article is illustrated by several photos by Bill Witt. To receive
a free copy of this issue, e-mail Cathy
Engstrom, Director of Communications, or call (515) 288-1846.
Request the Summer 2002 edition. INHF projects and research are
made possible by our members. Join us!
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