Cherokee
County easement
protects unique land
A new conservation
easement will protect a rare and lovely Cherokee County site for
future generations.
Ruth Alliband donated a conservation easement on her land along
the Little Sioux River valley near Cherokee to the Iowa Natural
Heritage Foundation (INHF), a nonprofit conservation organization
that protects Iowa's land, water and wildlife.
Though only 46 acres, the protected land has a wealth of natural
features including dry native prairies, large bur oaks and upland
wildlife species. Many of the land's steeply sloping portions
have never been plowed. The tallgrass prairie remnant includes
native species such as prairie dropseed, Indian grass, big and
little bluestem, junegrass and side oats gramma. Other plants
located on the land include wild hops, buffalo bean, hog peanut,
two kinds of New Jersey tea (americanus and ovatus) and Indian
turnip.
"The area within the conservation easement boundaries is
so unique because of the stands of tallgrass prairie on the south-facing
bluffs overlooking a creek system that meanders toward the Little
Sioux River," said Alliband. "There are also many forbs
(flowers) on the hillsides, as well as numerous plants."
Conservation easement donors voluntarily restrict certain land
uses for themselves and future owners. Although the land is still
privately owned, it remains protected in perpetuity. The value
of the donated rights may become a tax-deductible contribution
for the donor.
Alliband chose to prohibit development, mining, grazing and other
non-compatible uses and to allow ecological restoration, including
controlled prairie burns. As easement holder, INHF will monitor
the site annually to make sure easement conditions are still being
met.
The land has been in Alliband's family since the late 1920s. After
the easement was completed, Alliband sold the land to Ron Vos.
"I decided to sell the land because I felt it needed more
hands-on management than I
was able to provide from my home in Minnesota," Alliband
said, "but I very much wanted to have some assurances of
conservation that would exist beyond the duration of one carefully
selected successor."
Joe McGovern, INHF land stewardship program director, worked with
Alliband and Vos to draft the easement. "This is a wonderful
native prairie and oak savanna with a lot of potential. Through
permanent protection and future stewardship it will become even
better," said McGovern.
Vos said he plans to maintain and enhance the land, perhaps by
expanding the existing prairies. He would also like to allow college
students to study the diverse species on the land.
"We all worked closely on the easement. I believe that we
had the same goal in the mind: to preserve the present state of
the land," said Vos.
INHF has protected more than 75,000 acres of land throughout the
state. This is INHF's first completed project in Cherokee County.
Photo:
Ron Vos and Ruth Alliband on the donated land (by Joe McGovern).
For more
information about this story or other Foundation news, e-mail
Cathy Engstrom, Communications
Coordinator, or call (515) 288-1846.
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