2023 Fall - TNC Magazine Insert

MISSOURI

Ongoing Work in the Ozarks

Pickerel frog © Rebecca Weaver

Rose verbena © Rebecca Weaver

also tying into the broader mix of the watershed. And so, after three decades of work at Chilton, TNC knew MDC would be the right partner to protect the property permanently. “It has never been The Nature Conservancy’s goal to be the biggest landowner in a region,” says TNC’s Missouri State Director Adam McLane. “Our strength as an organization is really as a problem solver—being nimble enough, thanks to our donors and partners, to seize opportunities to protect Missouri’s critical conservation interests.” Chilton is now once again part of those 80,000 acres from the 1991 land deal, absorbed into MDC’s Peck Ranch. TNC will continue to work with MDC and other partners in the area, and the sale allows the Conservancy to seek out new problems to solve and opportunities to seize.

plants and animals that depend on that part of the Ozarks. During the next five years, the Conservancy would transfer roughly 75,000 acres to MDC at cost, which allowed the state to permanently protect it and continue restoration work. TNC held onto about 5,600 acres, a stunningly biodiverse segment along Chilton Creek. In the decades that followed, TNC and MDC carefully nurtured the properties, repairing the damage of commercial logging and fostering natural conditions that support diverse plant and animal life. The state combined the 75,000 acres and surrounding lands to create three sprawling conservation areas of about 40,000 acres each: Sunklands, Angeline and Rocky Creek. TNC created Chilton Creek Research and Demonstration Area, a living laboratory where the Conservancy and outside researchers tested and developed innovative conservation techniques with benefits that stretch far beyond the Ozarks. Chilton and the state’s conservation areas complemented each other while

Ozark tree canopy © Byron Jorjorian

Nearly half of the Current River watershed is protected in some way. Vast preserves, parks and a growing number of privately managed properties help safeguard the region’s biodiversity. The Nature Conservancy has long played an important role in those efforts alongside dedicated partners. One example is the Howard and Joyce Wood Ozarks Conservation Buyer Fund—an innovative tool that allows TNC to buy vulnerable land around the Current and Jacks Fork rivers, add permanent conservation easements on the properties and resell them. New owners agree to maintain the ecological integrity of the land. The fund ensures properties stay on the tax rolls and will be sustainably managed in private forests and recreational grounds. That benefits watersheds, ecosystems and wildlife, as well as local economies.

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The Nature Conservancy P.O. Box 440400 St. Louis, MO 63144

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