Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Prairie restoratio­n a priority for golf course

- THOMAS SACCENTE Thomas Saccente can be reached by email at tsaccente@nwadg.com.

FORT SMITH — A Sebastian County golf course is converting some of its land back to a prairie habitat, creating a new home for wildlife.

Ben Geren Golf Course this year received the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission Chairman’s Landowner Achievemen­t Award, which recognizes outstandin­g achievemen­t in land conservati­on to enrich Arkansas’ wildlife habitat.

The golf course and Jay Randolph, Sebastian County park administra­tor and golf course superinten­dent, were the first corporate/nongovernm­ental organizati­on honoree in the program, according to a Game and Fish news release.

The course was one of five winners in the state, the other four being landowners who dedicated private land to increase habitat for wildlife, working with the commission’s private lands biologists in the process.

The award isn’t the only attention Ben Geren Golf Course has received this year.

Some University of Arkansas-Fort Smith students gave a presentati­on at the 104th annual meeting of the Arkansas Academy of Science this month in which they discussed their work analyzing soil samples from virgin prairie at Massard Prairie in Fort Smith, as well as remnant, developed and restored tallgrass prairie at Ben Geren Golf Course.

Jeff Shaver, an associate professor of biological sciences at the university, is a faculty mentor for this ongoing project, which began in spring 2019.

Shaver said the goal is to be able to identify microbial communitie­s in the different types of soils, which were created through prairie restoratio­n efforts undertaken by Randolph. Researcher­s want to determine if there are different bacterial or fungal communitie­s in these soils, and, if so, whether they are an outcome of or a contributi­ng factor to the restoratio­n process.

“One of the long-term goals, and overarchin­g question, is could we potentiall­y identify fungal or bacterial soil species that are critical for efficient prairie restoratio­n,” Shaver said.

A TALLGRASS TALE

Randolph said Sebastian County Parks decided to start putting in native plants on its 27-hole Ben Geren Golf Course in 2016. Providing habitat for pollinator­s and other wildlife, as well as reducing water usage and mowing for the golf course, were among the reasons for this move.

Massard Prairie once existed where Ben Geren Regional Park stands today. The golf course is part of the park.

The prairie used to be 10,000 acres, but developmen­t has reduced the prairie to fewer than a couple of hundred acres, Randolph said.

Sebastian County Parks procured seed for tallgrass prairie vegetation through the Game and Fish Commission’s Acres for Wildlife program, Randolph said. Private landowners later permitted the organizati­on to harvest more seed from small pieces of virgin tallgrass prairie around the River Valley.

Sebastian County Parks is essentiall­y attempting to copy for the golf course what is on the remaining virgin pieces of Massard Prairie, according to Randolph. This includes hundreds of types of plants such as wildflower­s, sedges, rushes and tallgrass prairie grasses, he said.

These native plants also serve as “host plants” for native animals, among them birds and insects. Certain types of butterflie­s, moths and birds have been drawn to these Massard Prairie restoratio­n areas due to their dependence on plants found there, Randolph said.

Slightly more than 100 of the golf course’s 285 acres are devoted to tallgrass prairie restoratio­n, he said. Sebastian County Parks also has started restoratio­n areas in places outside the golf course.

Shaver said he and Randolph began their tallgrass prairie research collaborat­ion in spring 2019 by collecting soil samples from the golf course and Massard Prairie. They took additional samples in 2020, and this spring collected samples from three more tallgrass prairies on private land in the Fort Smith area.

Emily Bellis, assistant professor of bioinforma­tics at Arkansas State University, joined the project in fall 2019, Shaver said. The two received a grant of $66,946 last fall from the Arkansas IDeA Network of Biomedical Research Excellence to fund a portion of the research.

POLLINATOR PERKS

Leslie Cooper, coordinato­r for the Arkansas Monarch Conservati­on Partnershi­p, said she knows of a few Arkansas golf courses doing similar prairie restoratio­n projects, but none as large as the one at Ben Geren.

Monarch butterflie­s migrate each fall more than 3,000 miles from the United States and Canada to Mexico. Creating habitat for them facilitate­s their breeding cycle and their migration, Cooper said.

Conservati­on programs like that at Ben Geren are increasing monarch butterfly and pollinator conservati­on on both a state and national scale, Cooper said. The Ben Geren project is an example of such conservati­on occurring in “unlikely places” such as urban areas, rights of way and golf courses, she said.

There are programs and plans for enhancing habitat on public land, but it’s important that private land owners and managers integrate monarch butterfly and pollinator habitat into their management plan, given that a majority of Arkansas is privately owned, Cooper said.

Cooper said restoring these native ecosystems improves the soil; increases water infiltrati­on and quality; and promotes conservati­on.

“One in three bites of food is attributed to pollinator­s, to pollinatio­n services,” Cooper said.

 ?? (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Thomas Saccente) ?? Ethan Moore, junior and biology major at the University of Arkansas at Fort Smith (left), and Jeff Shaver, associate professor of biological sciences at the College of Science, Technology, Engineerin­g and Mathematic­s at UAFS, take a soil sample in one of the restored areas at Ben Geren Golf Course on March 29.
(NWA Democrat-Gazette/Thomas Saccente) Ethan Moore, junior and biology major at the University of Arkansas at Fort Smith (left), and Jeff Shaver, associate professor of biological sciences at the College of Science, Technology, Engineerin­g and Mathematic­s at UAFS, take a soil sample in one of the restored areas at Ben Geren Golf Course on March 29.

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