There鈥檚 a hard line between where the birds might be and where the birds certainly are not. On one side lies a rolling field of native prairie颅grasses鈥攚heatgrass and big bluestem, Indian grass and false sunflower. On the other, a long, slow rise of closely cropped soybean stubble that unfurls to the blue horizon. It鈥檚 hard to imagine much more than a June bug scratching out a living there.
I鈥檓 in the good stuff, a field. CRP, as it is widely known, is a program, funded by the farm bill, through which the U.S. Department of Agriculture pays landowners to replace low鈥攑roducing crops with native plant species beneficial to wildlife and ecosystems. I push through tall, winter-brown grass stalks and seed heads that rake my thighs. Beside me is Paul Niebur, the landowner who planted this field, and four other hunters flank us to the right. Their blaze-orange vests and hats wink through the grassland as two bird dogs vault ahead, sifting the air for the scent of a Ring-necked Pheasant.
I grip my shotgun and pick up the pace. We鈥檙e nearing the end of the field, and when the pheasants rise they boil out in waves鈥攆irst three birds closest to the dogs, then another half-dozen, launching from the flocculent grasses, the long plumes of the cock pheasants rippling like kite tails as they break for the sky.
鈥淩ooster! Rooster! Rooster!鈥 The hunters shout to identify the male birds, which are legal to shoot, as shotguns bark and more birds flush from the field. Four roosters fall, and the birds keep coming, three and five and a dozen at a time, until nearly 50 Ring-necked Pheasants clatter overhead.
鈥淟ook at 鈥榚m go!鈥 Niebur shouts at the sky, a wide smile on his face. 鈥淲ild birds, baby, and that鈥檚 why we do this!鈥
This field just west of Redfield, South Dakota, is emblematic of one of the more curious intersections in bird conservation: Hunters who ardently pursue an exotic, widespread Asian bird, and conservationists racing to stem the loss of native grassland species that share similar habitats. Niebur, a retired Minnesota businessman, originally bought 330 acres of row crop fields with a partner in 2000, later purchasing another 420 acres on his own.
He鈥檚 since poured his heart, sweat, and treasure into tailoring the farm into habitat where pheasants thrive. He鈥檚 converted fields of corn and soybeans to vast plots of native grasses and seed-bearing forbs, planted thousands of trees, and put in acres of pollinator meadows. 鈥淚 get as much enjoyment out of the habitat work as I do the hunting now,鈥 he says.
Niebur鈥檚 story plays out across pheasant country, from Texas to Minnesota, and west to the Pacific grasslands: Private lands purchased, protected, and managed by hunters crazy over a non-native species provide critical habitat鈥攊n many places the only habitat鈥攆or a suite of birds that is among the world鈥檚 most imperiled.
Across the Great Plains, grasslands are under siege. Nearly half of the region鈥檚 original acreage has been lost. In 2016 alone, more than 700,000 acres of northern Great Plains grasslands . The destruction has helped drive a dramatic drop in the numbers of birds that depend on that habitat: From 1968 to 2011, populations of North American grassland birds fell almost 40 percent, . The declines include species as varied as Chestnut-collared Longspur, Bobolink, and Northern Harrier. The fate of such birds is closely tied to that of private lands, as four-fifths of the country鈥檚 remaining grasslands .
Those lands contribute more than ground cover and food for hunters鈥 quarry. Each year, hunters who travel to pheasant country spend hundreds of millions of dollars leasing lands from locals and paying for lodging and meals, which both shores up rural communities and gives farmers good reason to keep wildlife habitat on the ground. That sets up a seeming contradiction: Despite its non-native status, and the fact that the traditional methods of managing land for pheasants haven鈥檛 always been as beneficial to native species as they could be, the Ring-necked Pheasant has emerged as a flagship bird that helps carry the weight of grassland conservation across huge portions of the country, offering a lifeline, albeit an imperfect one, for native birds.
As habitat management by landowners gains steam, biologists and private-lands advocates see a ripe opportunity. 鈥淧heasant hunting is a gateway drug,鈥 says Pete Bauman, a range specialist with South Dakota State University. 鈥淥nce you get people to appreciate pheasants and their habitats, it opens their eyes to all the native gems out there. That gives us the opportunity to tweak pheasant management to take care of all those other birds and animals.鈥
Here鈥檚 how America鈥檚 breadbasket turned into a bizarre roosterland: Efforts to plant Old World pheasants into the colonies date at least to the 1730s, but it wasn鈥檛 until the 1880s, when the U.S. consul to Shanghai imported Ring-necked Pheasants to his native Oregon, that successful large-scale introductions kicked off. In 1908, three South Dakota hunters purchased three pairs of Ring-necked Pheasants from an Oregon game farm and released them a few miles north of Redfield, in the state鈥檚 east-central region. While earlier pheasant releases had met with mixed results, these birds successfully nested, so much so that in 1911 the state of South Dakota augmented the burgeoning population with another 48 pairs.
In the ensuing decades, pheasant numbers grew exponentially. While untold millions of farm-bred birds are released for hunting each year鈥攆ew of which survive the following winter鈥攚ild, self-sustaining populations of Ringnecks are now found in such far-flung places as western Washington and the dunes of North Carolina鈥檚 Outer Banks.
Pheasant hunting inspires enormous levels of enthusiasm. In South Dakota, when I arrived at the Aberdeen Regional Airport, posters of bird dogs and flying pheasants welcomed hunters to town. At the car-rental counter, I was asked to sign a special form used during pheasant season that stipulated a $250 fine for excessive dirt or dog hair inside the vehicle. (鈥淎nd no animal offal,鈥 the agent told me. 鈥淒on鈥檛 be that guy.鈥) In Redfield, population 2,416, which calls itself the Pheasant Capital of the World, a giant pheasant raced across the town water tower. The high school mascot is a pheasant. There are dozens of hunting lodges in town, and spending on pheasant hunting works its way through every layer of community life. Statewide, pheasant hunters spent $244 million in 2016, and in Spink County, home of Redfield, nearly 6,000 hunters, two-thirds of whom were from out of state, dropped $10 million.
In some cases, landowners use pheasant hunting to augment their existing farming and ranching operations. Jim Faulstich, who raises cattle and crops on 8,000 acres in South Dakota鈥檚 Hyde County, began offering the sport on his ranch in 2000, and he uses rotational grazing to boost nesting and winter cover for birds. 鈥淭he bird hunting is another revenue stream,鈥 says Faulstich. 鈥淚t adds diversity to the financial enterprise so we can add diversity to the landscape.鈥
In other instances, out-of-town hunters end up buying a plot of their own. It鈥檚 difficult to calculate how many nonresidents own hunting land in the state and manage it specifically for pheasant habitat, but Tim Olson, senior private lands biologist for South Dakota Game, Fish & Parks, says it鈥檚 a trend that has been on the rise for decades. Shelly Wipf, Redfield鈥檚 assistant financial officer, lives in tiny Doland, 20 miles east of Redfield. 鈥淭here are maybe 200 people in town,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd I know of a dozen houses owned by out-of-state hunters.鈥
These landowners take advantage of federal and state programs to retain native prairie, plant native grasses, keep row crops off the landscape, and put in dense wintering bird cover. Greg Cronkhite, a Pennsylvania businessman, bought 2,500 acres of South Dakota farmland in 2011. He鈥檚 turned it into a pheasant haven and an accidental sanctuary for native species, with 1,000 acres of native pasture and grassland and hundreds of acres of CRP habitats and sorghum, sunflower, and corn food plots. With some exceptions, 鈥渕ost everyone else out here is a fifth-generation farmer trying to make a living growing grain,鈥 he says. 鈥淢y place is an oasis for wildlife.鈥
That isn鈥檛 to say that maximizing Ring-necked Pheasant numbers has historically been the perfect prescription for many grassland birds. 鈥淧heasants are much more generalized in their use of habitats than many native birds in the grasslands,鈥 explains David Pashley of the While the non-native birds can make a living in a wide range of landscapes, from pristine, unbroken prairie to intensively cropped parcels, species such as Sprague鈥檚 Pipit, Baird鈥檚 Sparrow, and Chestnut-collared Longspur need large, open grasslands. Pheasant friendly features such as food plots fragment that habitat. So can planting shelterbelts of trees鈥攕omething many hunters do when managing land, as the tree rows can accommodate a congregation of pheasants and hold them while hunters and bird dogs approach.
Sam Fryman, a wildlife biologist with the conservation group , agrees that past recommendations overlooked important habitat requirements for native birds. He works directly with South Dakota landowners, fashioning habitat-management plans. Every week, he says, landowners come into his office wanting to improve their property for wildlife, and one of the first things they ask about is planting trees. He often counters with a challenge: Let鈥檚 think about planting grass. Increasingly Fryman sees landowners embracing a more holistic approach to management, he says, including planting species to support pollinating insects that in turn support grassland birds.
Together with this shift, the impact of large-scale land conservation for a non-native bird is undeniable. In the southwestern corner of Minnesota, I walked through a wide ribbon of restored prairie grasses and cattail sloughs that unfurled for 12 unbroken miles. In a project managed by the Nobles County chapter of Pheasants Forever, local hunters led an effort that raised more than $850,000 to buy this tract and donate it to the state. Over the past 35 years, the chapter has spent more than $7 million to protect nearly 3,000 acres in the county.
鈥淥ur approach is pretty simple,鈥 says Scott Rall, president of the chapter. 鈥淲e raise money, buy cornfields with drained wetlands, restore the habitat, and donate it or give it away. That鈥檚 where the Bobolinks and Dickcissels live and where the prairie ducks nest. And the pheasants and pheasant hunters get to use it, too.鈥
Given the outsize importance of pheasant hunting to both local economies and native grassland birds, hunters and conservationists alike have been alarmed to see wild pheasant populations, like those of native birds, fall in recent years. In addition to outright habitat loss, they鈥檝e been hit by severe summer drought and tough winters. After pheasant numbers in South Dakota between 2012 and 2013, Governor Dennis Daugaard held a habitat summit that recognized the bird鈥檚 importance to rural economies and kicked off a working group to address habitat loss.
Still, pheasant numbers in the state continued to decline; South Dakota鈥檚 2017 pheasant brood survey from the 10-year average. Next door, in North Dakota, the 2018 spring pheasant count from the previous year. (Some states that had wetter weather, including Kansas, Colorado, and Nebraska, actually saw moderate year-over-year gains, and biologists are hoping that the rainy spring many pheasant-heavy states had this year will lead to population gains this hunting season.)
Meanwhile, the number of people who take part in the sport is dropping, too. In South Dakota there were 38,000 fewer pheasant hunters in 2016 than in 2007. In Illinois, a quarter-million hunters chased pheasants in the 1960s. That number last year. This underscores a grave concern that grassland conservation faces a new peril: The erosion of a constituency of support.
鈥淟osing hunters and bird dogs and shotguns would be catastrophic for grasslands,鈥 says Marshall Johnson, vice president and executive director of , which works with private landowners in the region. This year 爆料公社 Dakota seeks to influence management on 200,000 acres of grasslands with programs that stand to benefit both native-bird and pheasant populations. It also hosts farm and ranch tours to let the public see how landowners are working for wildlife. 鈥淎 lot of people are trying hard to do right by the land out here,鈥 Johnson says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 time to support private landowners in an unprecedented way, because grassland birds face unprecedented challenges.鈥
That support could come in the form of preserving the conservation initiatives funded by the federal farm bill, which expires at the end of September. 鈥淭he farm bill is increasingly important,鈥 says Matt O鈥機onnor, who coordinates habitat restoration for Pheasants Forever, 鈥渂ecause it carries these landscape-scale programs that make such a difference to farmers and other private landowners.鈥
Among them is the Conservation Reserve Program鈥攖he private-lands partnership that resulted in the 鈥済ood stuff鈥 I hunted in with Niebur. But the CRP has fallen far below its potential. Signed into law in 1985, the program originally was capped at 40 million acres; Congress dropped the cap to 24 million acres in 2014. As the 2018 reauthorization deadline approaches, conservationists are working to raise the cap and secure long-term funding for the program. (As of mid-August, the House and Senate to reconcile their respective drafts, which both have modest CRP gains: from 24 million acres to 25 million acres in the Senate鈥檚 bill, and 29 million acres in the House鈥檚.)
鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot of nexus here between the hunting, birding, farming, ranching, and rural communities,鈥 says Jim Inglis, director of government affairs for Pheasants Forever. 鈥淲e are talking about billions of dollars that impact tens of millions of acres for wildlife and natural resources, and we need everybody on board for this.鈥
Conservationists recognize the power of such an alliance, especially when it comes to protecting imperiled grassland birds. As we walk Niebur鈥檚 property one morning, Fryman observes that he is 鈥渆xactly the kind of landowner we need out here. He鈥檚 constantly thinking of ways to improve habitat. More CRP. Bunch grass. Pollinator plots.鈥 Fryman customized a seed mixture for the pollinator plot we鈥檙e standing in with some 30 native plant species. It鈥檚 the kind of field that might attract Lark Buntings and Dickcissels. But neither Fryman nor Niebur has any illusions about what drives this habitat work.
鈥淭he pheasants are the main motivator. I鈥檓 not going to lie about that,鈥 Niebur says. 鈥淏ut I鈥檝e learned that diversity is a huge part of habitat planning, and I鈥檓 seeing so much come back to life out here.鈥 Just this past summer, he says, he was on his tractor in the pollinator plots, and the butterflies were so thick in the air that he had to wave his hat in front of his face to breathe. 鈥淚鈥檇 never seen anything like it.鈥
This story originally ran in the Fall 2018 issue as 鈥淕oodwill Hunting.鈥 To receive our print magazine, become a member by .