Iowa's Wetland: The proceedings of the Iowa Academy of Science, 1981

(1981) Iowa's Wetland: The proceedings of the Iowa Academy of Science, 1981. Natural Resources, Department of

[img]
Preview
PDF
iowa_wetlands_1981_OCR-.pdf

File Size:4MB

Abstract

The Wisconsin glacier created a 7.6 million acre prairie-marsh-pothole complex in north-central and northwest Iowa. Prairie marshes, valuable for wildlife habitat and water retention, have been relentlessly drained. In 1938, only about 50,000 acres of prairie marshland remained and in 1980 this had been reduced to 26,470 acres of natural marsh. Meandering rivers have been straightened, eliminating miles of river course. Only 1,637 miles are officially designated as meandered streams. While natural marshes and unchanneled streams are threatened aquatic habitats, other wetlands have actually increased. Artificial reservoirs provide 47,562 water acres and 47 ,700 farm ponds have been constructed. Proper public attitude could increase the acreage of marshland as well as reservoirs. Approximately 5,000 acres of prairie marsh and pothole habitat remains in private ownership. To protect these threatened wetlands, additional money and public support is needed.

Item Type: Departmental Report
Keywords: wetlands, marshes, rivers, reservoirs, drainage, wetland inventory, Iowa Conservation Commission
Subjects: Natural resources and environment
Natural resources and environment > Ecology > Types of environments
Natural resources and environment > Water resources > Water quality
Natural resources and environment > Water resources > Wetlands
ID Code: 47449
Deposited By: Margaret Barr
Deposited On: 16 Jan 2024 20:16
Last Modified: 16 Jan 2024 20:16
URI: https://publications.iowa.gov/id/eprint/47449