I think there's on;y one in the midwest, but I'm not sure. Then there are the commercial cultivars you find at garden centers for home gardens.<br><br>There will be two majot outcomes from the BioBlitz. <br><br>One is a report on the habitats and species observed. The folks from TNC are excited because Owasippe, with approx. 5K acres, has the potential to hold a wide variey of life forms. They believe that the wet lands and waterways support every known species of turtle indiginious to Michigan, including the Blandings turtle, which is a threatened or endnagered species in many states. The cold weather (a low of 25F on Sat. night) prevented a lot of work in finding and identifying herps and insects. Even so, the total species count was over 300 plants and animals, and it will rise a bit higher after the botonist ID plant samples they collected. The birders sighted 115 species in the three days they were there!<br><br>Two is a series of recomendations for habitat restoration due later this summer. The Oak Forest and Oak Savanna communities (
Michigan Natural Community Types) should naturally see fire every 50 years ago from lightning strikes. These fires leave most of the mature trees intact but clear saplings and invasive species. Without selective clearing and prescribed burns, the sunny clearings fill in and the habitat disappears. Research indicates that the karner Blue can travel approx. 2 miles to find clearings. But if no other suitable clearing exists, the population is restricted and will eventually die off as the habitat disappears.<br><br>I believe the Chicago Area Council, the owner of Owasippe, with the OSA and TNC help. Will cut trees in some areas and burn both the new clearings and selected existing habitats. There have been some areas where the camp has allowed selective cut logging. On paper, this sounds proper. But in reality, it's distructive as the partial clearings created fill in with secondary species, such as White Pine and Choke Cherry, increasing these species overall density in the community.<br><br>I will be remaining in touch with the folks so I will update the page with the final recommendations when they are available. It's actually quite exciting because I don't believe the camp has implemented a comprehensive environmental management plan. I'm also working on a set of recomendations for TNC and CAC on how they might include scouts in the program in an ongoing role. The potential impact is awesome.