|
Fall 2001
The
Nature of
Chicago
Wilderness
Guest
Essay by John Rogner
 |
| Photo:
Greg Neise |
In
recent years, we in the Chicago region have been using the
word wilderness in a highly unconventional context.
We have coined the term Chicago Wilderness to
refer to the rich biodiversity that resides in this huge
sprawling metropolitan area an area most people think
of as anything but untrammeled by man, where man is
a visitor who does not remain, to use the words of
The Wilderness Act of 1964.
This is an area that is associated with, and defined by,
humans and our cultural footprint. The biodiversity is concentrated
in the fragments of land, slivers of land by conventional
wilderness standards, that are scattered throughout the
region 200,000 protected acres in all. It is found
in dozens of 100- to 1,000-acre units separated from each
other by houses, offices, roads, factories, railroads, cornfields,
concrete. Some fragments are larger, some smaller, but most
are small isolated islands by wilderness standards.
Within these fragments of protected land can be found some
of the best remaining examples in the world of tallgrass
prairie, oak savanna and woodland, fen, dolomite prairie,
and other natural communities. Also found within this complex
of preserves is an abundance of degraded, biologically depauperate
land, in need of restoration. Much of this degraded land
was used and abused for 150 years before coming under formal
protection. Aldo Leopold noted conservationist, founder
of the Wilderness Society and author of A Sand County Almanac
pointed out that the land has an innate capacity
for self-renewal. But because our islands of degraded land
sit in an urban matrix of lawns and homes, far from propagules
of native species, the land without help has little chance
of restoring itself to ecological health. People will, of
necessity, become the vehicle for restoring nature.
Chicago Wilderness is also the name we have given the collaboration
of over 130 organizations in the Chicago region. These diverse
groups have banded together to better protect, restore,
celebrate, promote, and publicize our rich biodiversity,
and reconnect a landless urban people to nature. Our goal
is to reconnect people, in Leopolds words, to the
raw material out of which we have hammered that artifact
called civilization.
The term Chicago Wilderness has been called
an oxymoron. The name was probably intended to some extent
to be provocative, to draw attention to the rich nature
in and around a city that few people associate with nature.
It was probably not a deliberate attempt to redefine wilderness.
But it does raise the question, is this an inappropriate
application of the concept of wilderness? Does it dilute
it, or might broadening the idea ultimately be of benefit
both to our nations network of formal wilderness preserves,
and to the fragments of real nature in and around the places
where we live? Might it be a way to reconcile the two?
 |
Lesser
Yellowlegs.
Photo: Kanae Hirabayashi |
Various
writers have pointed out that wilderness is a mental construct
that proves to be conceptually slippery when you try to
define its boundaries. And its connotations have changed
drastically over time. Wilderness has gone from
being a dark unknown place to be feared, to an equally unknown
place to be held in religious reverence and awe, to the
birthplace of American rugged individualism and democratic
ideals, to Leopolds early thoughts of wilderness as
primarily a place for primitive recreation. Some have pointed
out that all of these concepts maintain a separation between
humans and wilderness, made explicit by Wilderness Act language,
which says that man himself is a visitor who does not remain.
This thinking also holds that the American ideal of wilderness
has tended to shape our dominant view of nature itself as
a place that can only be corrupted by human influence.
I think this historical analysis has merit. Yet I think
that maintaining this separation, mentally and physically,
will not serve our national conservation interests indefinitely.
We in Chicago Wilderness have reversed the relationship.
Our wilderness will not thrive without human influence.
If we do not adequately enlist people to help manage and
restore these lands, they will not become or remain healthy.
And so our strategy is to take our campaign to the people
and ask that they exert a direct but creative influence
on our wilderness.
I realize, of course, that there are two very opposite types
of human actions. One type the Wilderness Act tries to prevent.
The other we encourage. One is destruction. The other is
conservation. Because we did not know how to use land without
abusing it, The Wilderness Act and its attempt to
isolate nature from human influence was perhaps the
appropriate remedy at the time. The post-war economic expansion
threatened to completely eliminate the last remnants of
our wildlands.
But by institutionalizing that separation, we create in
some people the false comfort that nature is something that
is adequately cared for in remote places, and not something
that exists and needs to be cared for by everyone in their
backyard. It deflects responsibility. In Chicago Wilderness,
we are trying to get people to assume responsibility. It
also creates the illusion that big wildernesses themselves
are self-contained and self-sufficient, or that they are
not still subject to human abuse through formal designation,
which they certainly are.
Of this I am sure: we need to promote in the public a sense
of connectedness. This becomes more urgent with every person
who leaves the farm and enters the suburbs. And I mean not
only connectedness of people with nature, but an appreciation
of the connectedness between remote wilderness and so-called
urban wastelands.
I spent three weeks several summers ago on a remote Canadian
Arctic river, as unpeopled and untrammeled a place as you
can reasonably find. Pure, glorious, unadulterated wilderness.
I took special delight in seeing the abundance of bird life
typically associated with wilderness areas: merlins, peregrine
falcons, gyrfalcons, and others. But the birds that remain
with me now are the lesser yellowlegs, which rose from every
gravel bar as we floated by. The memory of seeing this rather
unremarkable shorebird crystallized only three weeks later
when I stood on the artificial shoreline of Lake Calumet,
set in the post-industrial wasteland of southeast Chicago.
Steel slag waste and fill covered the uplands, forming the
lake borders. In the thin strand of beach material between
the slag and the waters edge, lesser yellowlegs were
refueling on their way south. Where I had seen them three
weeks previous was clearly wilderness, this place clearly
not. Or is it clear? Did the yellowlegs know the difference?
I personally hold the national wilderness preservation system
in the highest regard. I have spent much time in these areas,
and think Leopold and others created what has become a flagship
of American conservation. But the idea is in need of tinkering
in light of changing American attitudes and changing conservation
needs.
Wilderness is an idea in need of a greatly expanded American
constituency. It may be time to broaden the concept of wilderness
to emphasize connections between wilderness and people.
It may be time to recognize that humans always have influenced
landscapes, for better or worse, and that humans can be
a positive creative force in nature. And it may be that
by using the word wilderness for a 200-acre
patch of ancient prairie in a sea of suburbia, we can promote
a correct sense of unity between the places where we live
and remote places most will never see except as pictures
on calendars.
In contrast, the leave it alone, dont touch
attitude toward wilderness actually threatens the preservation
of nature in Chicago. In a few localities, there has been
sincere and strong opposition to land managers efforts
to introduce natural ecological processes, like fire, into
our preserves. Anti-restorationists are not anti-nature
they merely subscribe to the idea that human interference
is, by definition, corrupting, and nature will thrive only
if we leave it alone. Although methods will probably remain
a subject of debate, I am as certain of the need for constructive
human interference in the form of ecological restoration
and management in Chicago Wilderness as I am for the need
for it in large designated wildernesses. Neither is outside
the reach of human influence, both constructive and destructive.
Humans are part and parcel of both systems. To the extent
that the designated wilderness approach to conservation
has promoted dualistic thinking and separation from nature,
it is a counterproductive concept in the Chicago region.
Yet the lands comprising Chicago Wilderness have important
values traditionally associated with wilderness. They are
nature playgrounds for millions of city dwellers. They are
a repository of great biological diversity, much of which
cannot be found in any other Wilderness area,
anywhere. Thus these lands are base datums of ecological
health against which to measure land sickness. (This became
the highest value that Leopold placed on wilderness.)
So, back to Chicago Wilderness. It may offer some hope of
changing peoples relationship to nature and insert
people back into wilderness in ways that make both kinds
of wilderness relevant. What better way to reintegrate people
into the nature of which they are a part than to call all
of these scraps of nature in their own backyard wilderness,
and then redefine it to include indeed require
humans to maintain it in a healthy condition?
Restoration and stewardship will be the antidote to dualistic
thinking. And will this familiarity with wilderness not
then carry over into public support for the large tract
wilderness areas on the other end of the wilderness spectrum?
Both types of wilderness benefit when they are seen as part
of a single system that includes people.
John Rogner is Field Supervisor, US Fish and Wildlife Service,
and chair of Chicago Wilderness

|