How you can help Minnesota's most endangered animals and plants
Across the state, Minnesotans are witnessing what scientists are calling Earth's sixth mass extinction — and the first caused by humans.
Vanishing North
An occasional series in the Star Tribune documenting the biodiversity crisis and the people struggling to head off extinction for Minnesota’s most vulnerable animals and plants.
But people are taking extraordinary measures to save the rarest of the rare.
Here's what you can do to help paddlefish:
- Support projects to remove dams or update them with features such as rapids, which would allow paddlefish to return to more of their spawning grounds.
- If you accidentally snag one while fishing, never hold it vertically or grab it by the gills. Try to cradle it horizontally before getting it back in the water.
Here's what you can do to help golden-winged warblers:
- Create or preserve warbler habitat if you're a landowner. You can also apply for financial help from both the U.S. Department of Agriculture and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
- Support programs such as the Outdoor Heritage Fund and Environmental and Natural Resource Trust Fund.
- Keep pet cats indoors.
- Reduce the use of pesticides, especially neonicotinoids.
- Landscape with native plants, which support the caterpillars and other bugs songbirds need to survive.
- Support or get involved with groups that are working to save songbirds, such as the American Bird Conservancy.
Here's what you can do to protect native forest species like the goblin fern:
Don't use earthworms for bait in Minnesota. If you do, don't dump leftover earthworms anywhere but the trash. Earthworms are not native to Minnesota, and under state law it is illegal to release most non-native species into nature, the DNR says.
Here's what you can do to help butterflies and pollinators:
While it won't directly help the Poweshiek skipperling, you can make your property more hospitable to other insects. Mow less and garden more with native plants. Build a butterfly way station and pollinator habitat. Limit toxic pesticides in your garden and lawn. Tolerate some weeds and pests. Find safer pesticide alternatives for farm fields. Stop mowing ditches and plant them with natives. Let the milkweed grow.
Here's what you can do to help Minnesota's prairie chickens.
Go see them
- Support the organizations and agencies saving the bird's habitat by reserving a spot to see them. A handful of nature refuges offer public viewing blinds at their booming grounds each spring, including Bluestem Prairie, at 218-498-2679, and Glacial Ridge National Wildlife Refuge, at 218-687-2229. For a more complete list, go to prairiechickens.org/how-to-view.
Donate
- Donate or arrange conservation easements on private land for critical prairie restoration.
- Support organizations working to save habitat, such as Pheasants Forever and the Minnesota Prairie Chicken Society.
Support dedicated conservation funding
- Support the state's lottery-funded Environment and Natural Resources Trust Fund and the sales-tax financed Clean Water, Land and Legacy Amendment funds, all providing crucial financing for a host of environmental research and conservation projects.
Here's how you can help the Anoka Sand Plain and endangered bristle-berry plants
- Volunteer with the Minnesota's Rare Plant Rescue Program at 763-434-2030 x190.
- Support organizations working to protect the Anoka Sand Plain such as the nonprofit Great River Greening at 651-665-9500.
- Consider conservation options for private land through groups such as the Minnesota Land Trust at 651-647-9590.
- Donate to the state's Nongame Wildlife Program.
- Landscape with native plants. Check out the state Board of Water and Soil Resources website on creating pollinator habitat.
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