Two clumps of tall grasses stand
in the foreground. They're the only visible reminders
of the ancient prairie that waved here for millennia.
Autumn daybreak spills over a curved
dome of dark-leaved ancient oaks. Probably nothing in
this photo aside from the two grass plants, the oak
horizon, and the sun looks as it did thousands of years
ago. But the raw power of nature is here.
The grass on the left the
taller, darker, more erect one is big bluestem.
On the right, the paler one with the plumed heads is
Indian grass. They're surrounded by countless stems
of the weedy native, tall goldenrod. There's actually
an ugly process going on here. Before the goldenrod,
this was pasture grasses mixed with strawberries, daisies,
yarrow and similar meadow flowers. Its structure actually
had a lot in common with a prairie if the rare
native flowers and grasses had been interseeded, and
the site had been burned from time to time, we could
be seeing a rich sustainable prairie here now.
But the goldenrod is a step towards
brush. It crowds out an untended pasture. It won't carry
a fire well on most days and it isn't so receptive to
interseeded prairie species, so ten years from now we'll
likely be looking at shrubs and young trees - the process
people once confidently called "natural succession"
but in fact led to sickly forests of little quality
or use.
What would happen if we managed
this field?
We could burn the field occasionally,
releasing the sunlight stored in the dried plants each
fall and then see what comes up. But the likely
result of that strategy is Indian grass racing to cover
the entire meadow, with big bluestem hot on its heels.
Soon there would be a near monoculture of the more aggressive
bluestem. Dense tall grass is not so positive a fate
as some may think. The rank, tall grass will monopolize
the light and nutrients much as buckthorn, a woody invasive,
would. Not many other plants or animals can live in
a "prairie" such as this.
Another approach includes mowing
to reduce the goldenrod and sowing rare prairie seed.
Then burns might more successfully help a diverse ecosystem
to become established. The taller grasses would ultimately
take their place among the many other prairie species.
Such a diverse ecosystem provides habitat for a great
many rare animals and plants. These are the sorts of
options land that managers ponder when they read the
landscape and make the work prescriptions that are gradually
restoring health to our natural lands.

Photo of Spears Woods in Cook
County by Mike MacDonald (www.ChicagoNature.com).
Words by Stephen Packard.