Pratt's
Wayne Woods Saved From RoadFermilab Still Threatened
On May 21, DuPage County Board Chairman Bob Schillerstrom
announced that a planned feasibility study to build a road
through the 3,400-acre Pratt's
Wayne Woods had been called off. "An expensive
study to possibly build a new road through Pratt's Wayne
Woods Forest Preserve does not make sense and would be a
poor use of taxpayers' money," Schillerstrom said.
Conservationists celebrated.
Two
groups of conservation-minded citizens SOLID (Save
Open Lands In DuPage) and POP (Protect Our Preserves)
were instrumental in challenging plans for
the proposed road. Speaking for POP, Dr. Doug Mains emphasized
that a road through the preserve would set a dangerous precedent.
Development interests had lobbied hard for the project.
Earlier this spring, when the road appeared to be "a
done deal," Forest Preserve District President "Dewey"
Pierotti courageously promised to veto any proposal passing
the road through the forest preserve.
For
Marge Marola, a Warrenville resident, the expressway proposal
has been a recurring nightmare. Marola circulated petitions
a year ago in opposition to the DuPage County Board proposal
for extension of Eola Road into Fermilab. She collected
20 pages of signatures. But the county board approved an
$850,000 environmental impact study for the Fermilab section
of the project late last year. A broad spectrum of DuPage
citizens, ranging from bicycle enthusiasts to dog walkers,
have joined SOLID seeking to stop the Fermilab portion of
the road because of concerns about traffic safety, loss
of open lands, and declining property values. The group
now has its own Web site and joined forces with POP to oppose
the Pratt's Wayne road feasibility study.
Alan
Gard of SOLID notes that this road would follow the eastern
route for the proposed (and highly unpopular) Fox Valley
Expressway that bogged down in controversy in the early
'90s. Gard asserts that studies of routes through preserved
open land have been wasting taxpayer money since the first
study of roads through Pratt's Wayne Woods in 1997.
Although
Schillerstrom's decision to call off the Pratt's Wayne study
has cheered many DuPage residents, the fate of the road
through Fermilab is still up in the air. That feasibility
study is underway. The members of SOLID have pledged to
find alternative solutions to the purported need for more
roads in this part of DuPage County. For more information
and how to get involved, visit the SOLID
Web site, or call Marge Marola at (630) 393-3301.
Jim
Kostohrys and Rickie White
Referendum
Landslides
On
April 13, voters in Kane, Lake, and Will Counties passed
Forest Preserve District bond referenda to acquire conservation
lands by significant margins. "Getting such support by the
voters of Will County (57 percent voted in favor) indicates
that citizens are aware of the need to protect natural areas
in response to the enormous growth in population expected
in the next 20 years," said Mike Pasteris, director of the
Forest Preserve District of Will County. "The District intends
to buy up to 6,500 acres of land, much of which lies along
crucial waterways and next to preserves we already own."
In Lake County, where 66 percent voted in favor of a $55
million general obligation bond, Forest Preserve District
President Carol Calabresa sees open space as integral to
quality of life. "Lake County has 21,000 acres of preserved
land and our goal is 26,000 acres," she said.
"We'd
like 40 acres for every 1,000 people." Jon Duerr, director
of field services for the Forest Preserve District of Kane
County (where an identical 66 percent of voters approved
a $70 million referendum) said, "Having this money
allows all three counties (and DuPage County whose $70 million
referendum passed last year) to get matching state and federal
grants and expands the use of that money."
Alison Carney Brown
Piping
Plovers Invited
Once
common at all Great Lakes beaches, the federally endangered
piping plover is now extremely rare, with only 12 known
breeding pairs in this region. Ken Brock, author of Birds
of Indiana Dunes, says, "The problem is gulls and
people; people trample nest sites and the ever-increasing
colony of ring-billed gulls prey upon them." But people
are also the key to a brighter future for these little sand-colored
shorebirds, whose numbers doubled in the past few years.
With technical assistance from the US Fish and Wildlife
Service, the Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore is establishing
three nesting sites with hopes of attracting piping plovers
to their historic nesting areas on Lake Michigan beaches.
The sites are fenced exclosures, 80 yards by 350 yards,
on several beaches.
"If
grasses and other plant life are allowed to grow, piping
plovers might find the protection they need to nest,"
says Brock. "If we provide it, they'll come."
These nesting sites may also benefit common terns, which
are seen regularly on the Indiana beaches but haven't nested
there in this century. Michael Graff
First
Success, Then Shock Treatment
The
Army Corps of Engineers is riding to the rescue of native
fish in the entire Mississippi River drainage basin (and
possibly the five Great Lakes) by installing an electrical
gantlet in the Sanitary and Ship Canal north of Joliet.
The threat? The round goby: a 3-to-6 inch, bottom-dwelling,
Eurasian fugitive fish which made its great escape sometime
in 1990 from the ballast of ships sailing from the Black
and Caspian Seas. Recently gobies have been spotted swimming
in the Sag Canal as far south as Blue Island, raising fears
that they might use the man-made canal as a conduit to invade
the Mississippi River system. Although gobies go for the
taste of zebra mussels (another exotic invasive species
that has overrun Lake Michigan), they also dine on eggs
and young of native fish, including darters, logperch, and
trout.
The
gantlet, a series of electrically charged railroad rails,
will be placed along the sides and bottom of a 165-foot-wide,
25-foot-deep section of the canal between Lemont and Romeoville.
This will deliver a 70-volt jolt to the fish and force them
to reverse their southerly direction. Any masochistic fish
that still wish to run the length of this electrical gantlet
would then encounter a progressively stronger electrical
current, one that would eventually result in their death,
preventing them from entering and endangering the Mississippi
River ecosystem. (According to the Army Corps of Engineers,
the electrical field will not be strong enough to harm pets,
livestock, or people. Anyone accidentally coming in contact
with the gantlet would merely experience the tingle of needles
and pins, similar to a foot falling asleep.)
The
gantlet is a demonstration project testing the effectiveness
of an electrical field as a deterrent. Says project manager
Dave Handwerk, "We want to see how well electrical
fields reduce, slow down, or stop fish migration in both
directions. For decades, the channel was too polluted for
fish to live there. But with recent successful efforts to
clean up our waterways and control discharge, the water
quality of the canal has improved, allowing fish to travel
through the canal. The goby is our test species, but we
also want to see if we can prevent fish from the Mississippi
that are not native to the Great Lakes from migrating northward."
The first phase of the project is scheduled for testing
by the year 2000.
Eugene Bender
New
Members
On March 17, Chicago Wilderness welcomed 12 new members.
The Calumet Environmental
Resource Center of Chicago State University is an "information
clearing house" of environmental and economic development
resources (such as aerial photos, reports, and maps) for
the Calumet region of southeast Chicago and northwest Indiana.
The College of DuPage
manages 40.5 acres of nature preserves and offers restoration
tours, facilities for ecological conferences, and more than
100 classes about ecology and nature, including the region's
only regularly offered class on prairie ecology. Through
real estate transactions, demonstration projects, and education
and community-based activities, The
Conservation Fund designs creative conservation measures
for land and water resources. In addition to providing year-round
recreation programs, facilities, and parks for district
residents, Downers Grove Park District actively manages
160 acres of natural land, seeking to protect and restore
their vigor and diversity. The
Environmental Law and Policy Center of the Midwest works
through legal and policy advocacy to shape transportation
and energy policies that prevent sprawl, protect air and
water quality, and conserve our natural areas. Education
and community programs offered through the Garfield
Park Conservatory Alliance promote an awareness of the
variety and interdependence of living organisms, and encourage
participation in biodiversity protection. The Geneva Park
District offers adult, youth, and family classes and programs
at Peck Farm Park, a nature interpretive site also intended
to increase diversity of plants and animals through prairie
restoration, streambank stabilization, and butterfly gardens.
The Glenview Prairie
Preservation Project seeks to preserve and protect the
prairie remnant at the former Glenview Naval Air Station
through public education and programs. The Illinois-Indiana
Sea Grant College Program at Purdue University seeks
to foster the creation and stewardship of an enhanced and
sustainable environment and economy along southern Lake
Michigan and in the Great Lakes region through research,
education, and outreach. The Indiana Dunes Environmental
Learning Center seeks to provide educational and inspirational
experiences at the Indiana Dunes National Lakeshore to foster
understanding of and appreciation for the natural environment.
Lake Forest Open Lands Association
is dedicated to the conservation and restoration of
open space within Lake Forest and the surrounding area through
land acquisition, habitat restoration, public education,
and advocacy. The Trust for
Public Land seeks to acquire land on behalf of the general
public for the preservation of native plants and animals
in their biotic communities. Information about Chicago Wilderness
organizations is available from the Chicagoland Environmental
Network at (708) 485-0263 x369.
Bird
Stats
Four
hundred twenty birds have been documented in Illinois, most
of them in the Chicago Wilderness region. You'll find these
birds listed in taxonomic order in the new Illinois State
Checklist. Published by the Illinois Ornithological Society,
this 20-page booklet provides a complete listing of the
state's avifauna, including threatened, endangered, migratory,
and breeding status. Getting a new species added to the
state list requires documentation and a unanimous vote by
the Illinois Ornithological Records Committee. One of the
more recent Chicago Wilderness additions was a gull-billed
tern discovered and photographed by Eric Walters at Waukegan's
Municipal Beach on May 31, 1997. As of 1998, Tom Pucelik
held the record for the highest number of birds seen in
Illinois 386. Kevin Richmond was in second place
(383), barely beating out Richard Biss (382). To obtain
the new state checklist, send your name, address, and $3
to the Illinois Ornithological Society, State Checklist,
PO Box 931, Lake Forest, IL 60045.
Sheryl De Vore
Living
Color Really
On
April 26, a black, orange, and bluish spicebush swallowtail
was the first butterfly to flitter into the brand-new, yet-to-be-unfurled
indoor "Butterfly Haven" at the Chicago Academy
of Sciences. The 2,700 square foot glass enclosure will
soon be home to 25 different native butterfly species, including
giant swallowtails, tiger swallowtails, painted ladies,
and monarchs. Enrollment plans call for 800 butterflies
and 1,000 plants and trees in the new Peggy
Notebaert Nature Museum located in Chicago's Lincoln
Park, scheduled to open in late October. More butterflies
were introduced on May 21st, when elementary school students
from Glenview's Westbrook School and Glengrove School released
100-200 butterflies they had bred into the Haven.
As
one of 25 year-round exhibits of living butterflies in the
country, the Judy Istock Butterfly Haven is the only one
dedicated to native species. Founded in 1857, the Chicago
Academy of Sciences was the first museum in Chicago and
is today the only museum to specialize in the ecology and
natural history of the Midwest.
Nicole Kamins
Rabb
Honored
In
April, Dr. George Rabb, director of the Brookfield Zoo and
former chairman of the World Conservation Union's (IUCN)
Species Survival Commission, received the Conservation Medal
from the Zoological Society of San Diego, its highest honor.
The award recognizes Dr. Rabb's continuing leadership, vision,
and service to conservation worldwide. He joins a prestigious
list of former Medal recipients including Dr. Jane Goodall,
Prince Philip of Britain, and Sir David Attenborough. Dr.
Rabb also serves as co-vice-chair of the Chicago Region
Biodiversity Council, the governing body of Chicago Wilderness.
He is vice-chair of communications for the World Conservation
Union's Species Survival Commission and has been a conservation
advisor to a variety of organizations including the World
Bank, the US Marine Mammal Commission, and the US National
Research Council. (Plus, he loves frogs.)
Glenview
Prairie More to Love
Fortunately for 150 native plant species and for
us and other critters too members of the Glenview
Prairie Preservation Project (GPPP) have been working
hard to achieve their goal of protecting more land at the
now-decommissioned Glenview Naval Air Station. In 1998,
the Village of Glenview agreed to protect 14 acres of the
prairie habitat for rare species such as the upland
sandpiper, Craw's sedge, golden sedge, and mountain blue-eyed
grass on the 1,120 acre site of the former Naval
Air Station. In mid-March of this year, following concerted
lobbying by the GPPP and a second round of public hearings,
the Glenview Village Board unexpectedly voted to preserve
an additional nine acres of buffer space surrounding the
prairie. The site will be part of an approximately 1,000
acre multi-use complex that includes commercial and residential
uses, a 140-acre park with a 40-acre lake, and an Audubon-certified
championship golf course. GPPP president Sandy Hauseman
says the group will continue its efforts to protect more
of the prairie. "We are optimistic, especially since
this spring Glenview citizens elected three new village
trustees who appear supportive of preserving open space
and limiting high density development," Hauseman said.
"I think we Glenview residents have learned a very
important lesson in democracy that when you get involved
you really can make a difference."
Gerald D. Tang
One
Creation
On Sunday, April 25, members of the Evanston Sustainability
Circle met at Wayside Prairie and Harms Woods for a lesson
in stewardship. Steve Perkins, project director for the
Interreligious Sustainability Project, said the physical
experience of cutting brush and pulling weeds is an effort
to "find God with our hands, feet, and eyes." Most of the
55 attendees had never participated in earth-healing activities,
but as lay members of various Evanston congregations they
are coming together to "address the current crisis of our
relationship with the earth." Their statement of purpose
says, "Reorienting our social and economic priorities from
the short term to a concern for our grandchildren and their
grandchildren requires religious imagination and commitment."
After the day's work, the group met for song, prayer, and
shared reflections. Sustainability Circles independent grassroots
interfaith groups are also developing in Hyde Park, Oak
Park, and west suburban Cook County. The Hyde Park Circle
sponsored a beach clean-up and a puppet parade with huge
puppets made from recycled materials representing the cityscape,
forest, hand of God, and Hyde Park parakeet, among others.
The Interreligious Sustainability Project, founded in 1997,
seeks to inspire Chicago-area residents to restore the richness
of creation while meeting basic human needs sustainably.
For more information, call Steve Perkins (773) 278-4800
x155 or visit the Project's
Web site.
Wet
and Wild Book
Most people dismiss the plants growing in lakes and ponds
as weeds. But Lake Villa botanist Linda Curtis is working
to help land managers recognize the native and non-native
aquatic plant species of the region. Curtis published Aquatic
Plants of Northeastern Illinois (1998) and helped lead
the Illinois Lakes Management Association workshop in Lake
Villa last August. Curtis is pleased to report that a native
weevil has taken a liking to Eurasian milfoil (Myriophyllum
spicatum) and is devouring this pesky non-native
which is threatening to choke native aquatic plants in northern
Illinois lakes. "I wrote this book because I couldn't
find any information on these unique plants of northeastern
Illinois," said Curtis. "Now people can more easily
identify what plants are living in their lakes." That
knowledge, she hopes, will help people understand how to
manage their lakes better. To obtain a copy of Curtis's
book, send $15 to Curtis at Third Productions, PO Box 731,
Lake Villa, IL 60046.
Sheryl De Vore
Wet
Work For The Nippersink
From 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. on July 17, the McHenry County Conservation
District is hosting their biggest work party ever, and you're
invited! The District has been working to restore a rich
wetland community and natural lazy meanders to Nippersink
Creek, one of the highest, quality streams in the region.
Also participating are the US Army Corps of Engineers, US
Fish and Wildlife Service, Natural Resources Conservation
Service, and the Illinois Department of Natural Resources.
And now they need volunteer help to plant wetland
and wet prairie plants in the reconstructed river channel.
After the good hard work of planting cord grass, marsh blazing
star, and river bulrush, volunteers are invited to relax
and enjoy refreshments and meet restoration site stewards
from throughout McHenry County. "We expect around 200
people to take this opportunity to help the Nippersink and
learn about other ways to have fun and help nature in McHenry
County," said volunteer coordinator Sue Jacobic. For
more information and to register, contact Jacobic at (815)
678-4431.
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