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Good for farmers and fowl: Lease
bids up
By SARA HOTTMAN,
Herald and News 3/10/11
H&N file photo by
Andrew Mariman
Wheat is one of the grains
grown in the Lower
Klamath National Wildlife Refuge that benefits birds.
On Wednesday, the
close of the bidding period, preliminary results show
the Bureau of Reclamation received a record-setting 268
bids on 82 lots, generating nearly $3.15 million in
winning bids, said Kevin Moore, spokesman for the
Bureau’s Klamath Basin Area Office.
Last year, when the
winter was dry and water deliveries were limited, the
Bureau opened 55 lots for bid and received 109 bids.
Winning bids generated $616,719, Moore said.
The Bureau runs the
bidding process for the federal land lease program that
is ultimately managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife
Service to benefit migratory birds that visit the Lower
Klamath and Tule Lake refuges in the spring and fall.
Through the program,
farmers lease land from the federal government and plant
and harvest it as they normally would, but in proximity
to birds migrating along the Pacific Flyway that reaches
from Canada to Mexico.
“With the land lease
program, even though farmers harvest 100 percent of
their fields, there’s still a significant amount of crop
residue they’re not able to harvest, and that’s a
benefit to birds,” said Dave Mauser, supervisory
biologist for the Klamath Basin refuges.
When farmers flood
their lands, they create a sort of temporary wetland
that is attractive to waterfowl. That helps improve
biological diversity, Mauser said.
Within the land
lease program, farmers can flood their land for two
years, essentially creating a marsh, and after the
two-year period drain the land and have it organically
certified.
Side Bars
Sharecropping at the refuges
The Klamath Basin
National Wildlife Refuges has another, smaller share
crop program for farmers near the refuges.
Rather than pay to
lease the lands, farmers plant barley or wheat and then
agree to harvest only 70 to 75 percent of the crop,
leaving the other 25 to 30 percent for birds, said Dave
Mauser, supervisory biologist for the Klamath Basin
National Wildlife Refuges Complex.
Applications for
this year’s program were due March 4, but the program
recurs annually. Only professional growers with
documented experience growing small grains are
considered.
The program spans
2,372 acres of the Lower Klamath refuge. Preference is
given to applicants who provide “walking wetlands” on
private lands and will farm refuge cropland organically
— a two-year process.
Cooperative farming
agreements usually last one year, though the duration
can be adjusted based on wildlife benefits associated
with private land, walking wetlands, and availability of
water.
Growers are
responsible for all growing costs. Pesticide use is
restricted to products containing MCPA, 2,4-D, dicamba
and glyphosate.
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Page Updated: Friday March 11, 2011 02:55 AM Pacific
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