About 20 farmers and landowners heard about a program to attract wildlife to their less profitable land Feb. 18 at the Lonoke Community Center.
David Long, an agricultural liaison with the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission, said farmers had a bad year because of the flooding and snow, and the Continuous Conservation Reserve Program brings an opportunity to provide stable income on land that is hard to farm.
According to Long, the program gives people money to create wildlife habitats on their farms and applies to row crop lands and certain types of pastures.
“It is based on soil type for croplands,” Long said.
He said farmers face high fuel and fertilizer prices, flooding, drought, insects and crop diseases, so the program offers farmers benefits for retiring marginally profitable cropland, such as receiving stable income through yearly rental payments, earning income from possible hunting leases after habitat improves and keeping soil on the farm.
Long said a farmer can put buffers on their field edges, which makes good nesting areas for habitat. Filter strips and riparian forest buffers can be used to increase income along field edges. Long said filter strips are cropland edges next to water bodies for filtering runoff. They can be installed next to cropland and are good for quail, rabbits, deer bedding and fawning areas. He said wildlife habitat for upland birds targets primarily quail and songbirds but has benefits for rabbits, turkey, deer and other wildlife.
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http://www.cabotstarherald.com/articles/2010/03/04/carlisle_independent/features/fea01.txt