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Kitty Todd Preserve
The 850 acre Kitty Todd Preserve is a centerpiece of the Oak Openings Region and is a model of land management practices for the region. The property is owned and managed by the Nature Conservancy. Kitty Todd Preserve is composed of low-lying wetlands and windblown sand dunes populated by prairie, oak savanna, woodland and forest in a rural suburban area. Kitty Todd Preserve is composed of low-lying wetlands and windblown sand dunes populated by prairie, oak savanna, woodland and forest in a rural suburban area. Home to the globally endangered black oak savanna community, the preserve hasone of the highest concentrations of rare speciesof any nature preserve in the state. Notable species include the lark sparrow, Karner blue butterfly and wild lupine. Kitty Todd is a truly amazing prairie that should not be missed!
Location: Toledo
Link: Kitty Todd Preserve
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Irwin Prairie
Irwin Prairie is the finest example of a sedge meadow in the state of Ohio. The 226 acre wet prairie is dominated by sedges and rushes including more than 26 state-listed species. The site serves as a habitat for migrating songbirds and waterfowl. The best time to visit Irwin Prairie is during July and August to view the summer wildflowers.
Location: Lucas County about 10 miles west of Toledo.
Link: Irwin Prairie
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Firelands Prairie
Thirty two acres of beach ridges support dry sand prairie species and wet meadows with rare plants. Agricultural activities have disrupted some of the diversity, but many state-listed species remain. The sandy soil at Erie Sand Barrens is perfect for plants like green milkweed, partridge pea and sand panic grass to thrive. Lower lying wet areas hold sedge meadows with plants more common along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts.
Location: Located in Erie County 9 miles south of Sandusky.
Link: Firelands Prairie
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Claridon Railroad Prairie
The Claridon Railroad Prairie is a naturally seeded area, not a reconstruction. The prairie is a mile long strip of land that it is 50 feet wide. While the prairie can be enjoyed from your car, its diversity is best appreciated by walking along the roadway. The railroad construction likely damaged the prairie; it still contains over 100 species. The railroad tracks are still in use so please use caution during your visit.
Location: Five miles east of Marion, just north of the junction of State Route 3009 and State Route 98 along the south side of the CSX Railroad right-of-way.
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Killdeer Railroad Prairie
Killdeer Railroad Prairie is approximately 3 acres of largely wetland prairie with a natural valley and a borrow pit created while constructing the railroad. This naturally seeded area is a true prairie remnant. It is known for its stand of swamp thistle, cowbane, slender gerardia and pierced leaf boneset. One important wildlife note: Massasauga rattlesnakes are known to inhabit an area just 2 miles northwest and are likely living at this site too. Keep your eyes and ears open for these 3 foot long poisonous rattlers.
Location: West ofWyandot County Road 125, on the south side of the CSZ railroad tracks less than a mile and a half from Morral.
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Darby Plains Prairie
In 1976, Metro Parks began prairies restoration at Battelle-Darby Creek. All of the seeds used for the restored prairies at Battelle-Darby Creek and Prairie Oaks Metro Parks originated from the Darby Plains. To preserve the same genetic makeup of the original Darby Plains, the seeds sown at Battelle Darby were collected by hand from natural prairies. The Darby Plains once covered an area about 385 square miles ranging from Union County to the north, Madison County to the west, Pickaway County to the south, and the watershed boundary with the Scioto River to the east, comprising most of the Big and Little Darby watersheds. Many Darby Plains’ prairies were wet and had to be drained before they could be settled. As a result, the Darby Plains was one of the last settled areas in Central Ohio.
Links: Darby Plains Prairie
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Smith Cemetery State Nature Preserve
The Darby Plains once supported a vast tallgrass prairie with scattered groves of oaks and hickories. The area was described as a sea of prairie grasses and colorful prairie wildflowers. Today, bur oak trees grow sparsely and infrequent patches of prairie plants are all that remain. The best remnants of the Darby Plains survive here at Smith and in nearby Bigelow Cemetery.
Location: 2 miles west of Plain City on SR 161
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Bigelow Prairie State Nature Preserve
In 1978 the Bigelow Cemetery was dedicated as an interpretative state nature preserve. The Division of Natural Areas and Preserves is working to preserve the tombstones and protect the prairie species within the cemetery. The site has never been plowed or grazed and still contains many colonies of prairie grasses and wildflowers. For many years Bigelow Cemetery was the only known location in the state for the royal catchfly, the cemetery’s rarest plant. Summer-blooming prairie wildflowers are at their peak from late July through August.
Location: Eight miles west of Plain city on State Route 161
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Milford Center Prairie State Natural Area
This remnant is only 1.5 miles long, but it supports nearly 60 different species of prairie plants. Common species to see here include big bluestem, royal catchfly, smooth rose, prairie dock, stiff goldenrod and gray-headed coneflower. The best time for viewing prairie wildflowers is in late July through August.
Location: Located in Union County, 2.5 miles south of Milford Center along SR 4
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Although Ohio typically is not thought of as a "prairie state," portions of Ohio did include extensive areas where trees were sparse. The word prairie is from the French word pré which translates to English as meadow—a meadow and a prairie are similar in the sense that they both lack woody vegetation. The key difference between the two is that a prairie is a stable, self-perpetuation community instead of being a sparse woodland area. The plants that dominate prairies tend to be specialist in that habitat that have genetically evolved to allow themselves to be tolerable of drought, fire and low levels of nitrogen in the soil. The most striking plants of the prairie are the tall grasses that thrive in the warm summer weather such as big bluestem, Indian grass, switchgrass, little bluestem and prairie cordgrass. There are also lots of colors in the prairies given by colorful forbs (non-woody wildflower plants that are neither grasses nor grass-like); many of these forbs are members of the aster family and the legume family. Grasslands occur worldwide, mainly in the dry interiors of continents. In North America, prairies are differentiated into the drier western shortgrass prairie that blends into desert and the moister midwestern tallgrass prairie that borders forest. |
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In order to understand the reason why we have prairie areas in Ohio, hundreds of miles east of the Great Plains region, it is necessary to go back 8,000 years in history, shortly after the retreat of the last great ice sheet to cover Ohio, the Wisconsin Glacier. From 8,000 years ago until 4,000 years ago, the xerothermic period took place in which the North American climate was considerably warmer and drier than it is presently. During this interval, a tongue of prairie became established across Illinois, Indiana and Ohio but barely extends into Pennsylvania and parts of southern Ontario. Due to the shape of the area, it became known as the "Prairie Peninsula." |
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The prairies that remained in the peninsula after the climate changed to that of present-day conditions tended to occur as scattered islands in an otherwise forested country. In Ohio, an estimated 2% of the state was prairie during pre-settlement times. They were clustered in discrete regions where a combination of soil conditions, topography and continual fire-setting by Native Americans kept forest from taking over. Today, much of the prairie management is focused on discouraging woodland plants. |
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