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Landowner
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Wildlife
Habitat
Buffer Strips 
Establishing Filter
Strips and Buffer Strips for Wildlife (FNR-204W) (in
production)
Agricultural
fields commonly contain natural swales and depressions that concentrate
water flow after storm events. Rather than
planting
row crops, plant grassed waterways on these highly erodible areas.
By reducing the rate of surface water flow, grassed waterways
can
reduce soil erosion and thereby improve water quality. However,
grassed waterways can also provide valuable wildlife habitat
if
you do the following:
- Avoid planting fescue, a cool-season grass,
if wildlife habitat is a priority. If fescue must be planted,
a low-endophyte fescue (Johnstone, Fawn,
Kenhy, Forager, and varieties) should be used.
Fescue endophyte is a fungus that grows between the cells
of a tall fescue plant. High-endophyte fescue (Ky31 variety)
has been found to reduce litter sizes in some species such
as
rabbits.
- Plant a combination of grasses (Kentucky
bluegrass, orchardgrass, perennial ryegrass, redtop, switchgrass,
or timothy) with clover, annual lespedeza (southern Indiana
only),
or partridge pea.
- Establish filter strips (in production) on
each side of the waterway.
- Minimize or eliminate
disturbance (mowing, machine traffic, grazing, etc.) during the
nesting season. Repeated mowing during the growing season prior
to establishment is necessary for establishment of cool-season
grasses and control of weeds. Once established, mow the grassed
waterway in a 2 to 3 year rotation so that only 1/2 to 1/3 of
it is mowed in a given year. This will maintain the integrity
of the waterway while providing some winter cover and early-spring
nesting habitat for wildlife. Mow cool-season grass no shorter
than 6 inches and native warm-season grass no shorter
than 10 inches.
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