SDSU Extension receives $1 million to protect grasslands from invasive trees

SDSU Extension
Posted 5/17/23

BROOKINGS — South Dakota has an imminent woody plant encroachment problem.

In other words, trees are taking over the grasslands. To meet that threat, SDSU Extension recently received a $1 million contribution agreement from the Natural Resources Conservation Service to combat the spread.

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SDSU Extension receives $1 million to protect grasslands from invasive trees

Posted

BROOKINGS — South Dakota has an imminent woody plant encroachment problem.

In other words, trees are taking over the grasslands. To meet that threat, SDSU Extension recently received a $1 million contribution agreement from the Natural Resources Conservation Service to combat the spread.

Sandy Smart, SDSU Extension agriculture and natural resources senior program leader, said most of the contribution agreement will fund a new field specialist who will work with landowners to identify where there is a threat and to preserve their own land.

It will build on the work already being done through SDSU Extension and partner organizations, including SDSU Extension Natural Resources and Wildlife Field Specialist Pete Bauman’s work with the South Dakota Grasslands Coalition and its annual prescribed fire trainings; and Sean Kelly, SDSU Extension Range Management Field Specialist, with the Mid-Missouri River Prescribed Burn Association in south-central South Dakota.

Along the Missouri River corridor, many landowners and public officials already see the issue as trees creep across the grasslands, choking what used to be open pastures. But beyond, it’s still not widely seen as an issue. Even those who recognize the issue are wary of using fire to fight it.

Smart said the priorities are to educate people on the issue, and then to de-stigmatize the use of fire as a way to manage that issue. Eventually, the goal is to create a burn association modeled after the Mid-Missouri River Prescribed Burn Association. But the first thing is to raise awareness among South Dakotans before additional grasslands are lost.

A “woody plant” is anything with a hard stem. The most common examples are trees and shrubs or bushes, with some vines included. While eastern redcedars are among the most invasive, other species encroaching the grasslands include pine, cottonwood, dogwood, Russian olive, Siberian elm and buckthorn.

To kick start the awareness campaign, Smart helped organize a Woody Plant Control Summit in December 2022 in Oacoma. The meeting gathered SDSU Extension experts; state, federal, and tribal officials; non-governmental organizations; and landowners to hear research on and first-hand accounts of tree encroachment.

One of the leading voices calling for the protection of the grasslands is Dirac Twidwell, a rangeland and fire ecology professor at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. Twidwell has documented the collapse of grasslands across the Great Plains, and has seen the same slow crawl from Texas to Nebraska. Every other state was too slow to respond, and he said South Dakota is next.

“You will lose your horizons,” Twidwell warned. “Unless this group is different. You have a chance to do what the rest of the Great Plains can’t.”

Grasslands are under-protected and highly converted, Twidwell said. The top two threats are crop conversion and woody encroachment.

“We protect forests for the sake of forests. We’ve viewed grasslands since settlement as something that has no value and needs to be improved,” he said of the Great Plains region.

But losing an entire biome (an area that can be classified by the plants and animals that live there) has consequences. It impacts human health, water quality and endangered species. For ranchers, it means loss of grazing lands, increased wildfire threat, and potential loss of their livelihoods. For wildlife, it’s the loss of their habitat. For sportsmen, it’s a loss of hunting opportunities as native species get pushed out. In South Dakota, where pheasant hunting is also a major tourist attraction, that has a wider economic impact, as well.