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Prairie
Posters ... and more!
Interactive CD-ROM |
Plant Profiler |
Prairie Seedling Guide |
Native Seed
Production Manual
You’ve seen these popular posters--featuring the
artwork of Iowa artist Mark Muller--in
classrooms and nature centers throughout Iowa
and the entire prairie region. A set of six
prairie posters is yours FREE, courtesy of the
Living Roadway Trust Fund.
Use our order form to place
your order and to tell us how you’ll be using the
posters.

Here's how some of the posters
are being used now:
Spirit Lake,
Iowa:
"One
set is for use in the Spirit Lake Protective
Association, and the second set is for my
daughter's second grade classroom. Thanks!."
Madison, Wisconsin: "I work
for Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources.
The posters will be placed on a display at
the office and at the local town hall."
Belle Harbor, New York: "These
posters will be displayed in a social studies
classroom at a high school in NYC. Thank you. "
Paxton, Illinois: "We
received four of these posters in the mail about
a year ago and I bought frames and hung them on
the wall by our front counter. When customers
come in for assistance with field borders, etc.
we can show them what the plants will look like
that we put in their plans. We use these all the
time and love to look at them. Thanks for
sending us these great posters."
Britt, Iowa: "I
will use these in the resource room of the
Hancock County Ag Museum. The resource room
window looks out on the native prairie area that
we are establishing. Our number of class tours
are increasing and we have many visitors during
special county events (county fair, draft horse
show, hobo days, etc.)." |
| Wet Prairies |
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Wet prairies
and sedge meadows have standing
water in them during at least
part of the growing season with
sedge meadows being wetter than
prairie wetlands. Both
can withstand periodic flooding. They are most often located in
low areas, potholes, streambanks
and hillside seeps. Some mesic prairie plants do well in
wet prairies and some wet plants
tolerate mesic conditions.
It is often quite difficult to
tell where a wet prairie ends
and a sedge meadow begins. Wet prairies were once quite
common in north-central Iowa. Because
their soils were rich, these
prairies were tiled and
drained for cropland and few
exist today. Therefore many wet
plant species are rare. |
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Blooming Dates |
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Blooming dates will vary due to
geographic location, rainfall, light,
temperatures, soil types, competition,
age of the plants and genetic
variations. Even within a species,
individual plants may bloom weeks before
or after other individuals of the same
species under the same conditions. This poster may be used as a guide to
the average blooming dates and durations
of the blooms. You will have to
adjust the dates according to your
geographic location; plants in southern
Iowa typically bloom earlier then those
in northern Iowa. You may want to
note the blooming dates and durations for
your area right on the poster and
compare them over time. |
| Mesic Prairies |
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Mesic prairies were the most common
prairie type to cover Iowa. They
are not wet and not dry, but
lie somewhere in between. Mesic
prairies have lighter soils than wet
prairies and are found on both loamy and
sandy soils. Rainwater soaks in
more on mesic prairies than it does on
dry prairies but does not collect water
from surrounding areas like a wet
prairie. Mesic prairies are
generally found on level to gently
sloping land and with well-drained, rich, dark soils nearly
all have been converted to cropland. They are now the rarest type of prairie. Mesic plant and animal communities are
very diverse and often contain species
found in other types of prairie. |
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Blooming Heights |
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Blooming heights may vary according
to your geographical area, soil types,
temperature, rainfall, sunlight,
competition and genetics. Even
though plant heights may vary from one
year to the next or vary with
geographical location, this poster is
useful as a guide to relative blooming
heights. Generally, the shortest
plants bloom in the early spring and are
replaced by taller plants as the shorter
plants begin to fade, with the height of
the plants becoming progressively taller
throughout the growing season.

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| Dry Prairies |
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Dry prairies or upland prairies are
home to a variety of plants and animals
that have adapted to harsh, hot, arid
conditions. Plants found on dry prairies are shorter in general then
they are on wetter types of prairies,
often 3 feet or less. The majority
of dry prairies in Iowa are found on
steep slopes along the Missouri and
Mississippi rivers. The largest
prairie remnants in Iowa are located in
the Loess Hills along Iowa's western
border. Some of the species
pictured on this poster may be common in
more western states but in Iowa can only
be found on the steep, west-facing
slopes of the Loess Hills. Dry
prairies never made up a large
proportion of the types of
prairies in Iowa but now, ironically,
they are the most abundant
and
least disturbed. Because they are
usually located on very steep, erodible
slopes, with thin or sandy soils, many
have managed to escape the plow and
development. The biggest threat to
them these days is the encroachment of
trees and shrubs since wildfires are far
less common than in pre-settlement days. State and private
agencies are beginning to conduct
controlled burns to alleviate this
problem.
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| Oak Savannas |
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Oak savannas
are comprised of a few select
trees and shrubs as well as
prairie plants that thrive on a
blend of shade and sun. Savannas lie along the continuum
between a prairie and a forest. Often it is difficult to tell
where one ecosystem begins or
ends but a classic oak savanna
is characterized by
widely-spaced bur oaks with
massive, spreading crowns. These "oak openings" were often
described by early settlers as
"park like" or "orchard like."
As on open prairie, savannas
depend on frequent fire.
Historically, grazing elk
and bison helped to maintain oak savannas as
well. Complete,
undisturbed savannas are
virtually nonexistent now and much
of what is known about them comes from the
descriptions of early settlers. |
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Interactive
CD-ROM |

"Iowa's
Natural Landscape" is an interactive CD
containing information about Iowa's natural
history, including the characteristics of the
state's eight landform regions. An extensive,
illustrated field guide of Iowa's native prairie
plants and indigenous animals is
cross-referenced by landform region. Restoring
and preserving native prairie plant populations
has important ecological and economic benefits
for individuals, communities, and the state of
Iowa. One purpose of the CD is to explain the
use of Iowa native plants in roadsides. This
educational CD is appropriate for students in
grades 4 and above, and individuals interested
in Iowa's natural history. You may request the
Iowa's Natural Landscape CD from
the
Roadside Coordinator. |
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Plant Profiler |
Additional
information about the native plants of Iowa and their use in the state's roadside management program is available in "Iowa's Living
Roadway - Plant Profiler," a 132-page book produced by the Iowa Department of Transportation. Electronic versions of this
publication may be viewed and printed from the DOT's web site, and depending on availability, Iowa residents may be able to order a
copy of the book. To view or order "Iowa's Living Roadway,"
click here. |
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| Prairie
Seedling Guide |
This
easy-to-read, guide helps
identify seedlings of more than
50 of the most commonly seeded
tallgrass prairie plants, as
well as common agricultural
weeds. It is the result of
collaboration among more than 15
project partners, including the
Living Roadway Trust Fund.
View the guide online or order
your own copy.
Iowa residents may
request a copy from the
Roadside Coordinator. |
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| Implementation Guides |
Trees Forever, through its
Iowa's Living Roadways program, has created several publications to aid volunteers, and other individuals and organizations, in
developing and maintaining local planting projects. This Implementation Guide Series includes:
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Maintenance of Small-Scale
Native Plant Gardens
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Maintenance of Large-Scale Prairie Plantings
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Why Plant Native
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Prairie
Seedling Identification
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Finding and Selecting Native Plant Material
Downloadable versions of these guides are available from
Trees Forever. |
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| Native Seed
Production Manual |
The
University of Northern Iowa's
Tallgrass Prairie Center has
published a manual that provides
a wealth of basic seed
production information for
nearly 50 tallgrass prairie
species. The information is
compiled from published accounts
coupled with native seed
production experience at the
Tallgrass Prairie Center.The
Native Seed Production Manual
was written and edited by Greg
Houseal, Program Manager of the
Iowa Ecotype Project. The
Ecotype Project receives annual
support from the Living Roadway
Trust Fund.
The Manual can be purchased
for $10, plus $3 s/h, by
e-mailing the
Tallgrass Prairie Center. |
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