People Stories

Can a Wetland Help a Farm? Ask These Family Farmers

The Mackinaw River on Franklin Demonstration Farm in central Illinois. Photo © Cristina Rutter for The Nature Conservancy

In the heart of the Midwest’s Corn Belt, a family farm is experimenting with ways to keep its nearby rivers clean. On a farm in the heart of Illinois, nearly a decade and a half of experiments are unfolding.

For six generations, the land’s owners, the Franklin family, have farmed their 250 acres along the Mackinaw River—a tributary to the Illinois River, which itself joins the Mississippi. The Mississippi has long struggled as fertilizer runoff from farms polluted its water and fed dead zones downstream in the Gulf of the Mexico. Since 2014, the Franklin family has worked with researchers from The Nature Conservancy, the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana and elsewhere to test ways to reduce the amount of fertilizer washing into local rivers.

Krista Kirkham, an aquatic ecologist for TNC in Illinois, talks about discoveries made there. A version of this article ran in Nature Conservancy magazine’s Spring 2018 issue, which focused on how food can be produced more sustainably. Read more food and conservation stories here. — NCM Krista Kirkham Krista is the assistant aquatic ecologist for […]

More about wetlands, ecosystems and remediation:

We’re in a global water crisis. It’s time to turn to nature

Bringing the Chesapeake Bay to Baltimore’s Inner Harbor

Water and wetlands

Coastal wetlands can significantly reduce property damage due to hurricanes

Beekeeping preserves wetlands in Algeria

Explore the Largest Coastal Restoration Project Completed In Louisiana’s History

Water Warriors and Other People Stories

Summary
Article Name
Can a Wetland Help a Farm? Ask This Family Farm
Description
The Mississippi has long struggled as fertilizer runoff from farms polluted its water and fed dead zones downstream in the Gulf of the Mexico. The Franklin family works with researchers from The Nature Conservancy and the University of Illinois to test ways to reduce the amount of fertilizer washing into local rivers.
Author
Publisher Name
Cool Green Science
Publisher Logo

Recent Posts

Lethal cyanobacteria are creeping into rivers—no one knows exactly why

Researcher Hannah Bonner conducts a visual monitoring survey of benthic cyanobacteria in North Creek, a…

3 days ago

Meet the underwater gardeners that scrub Imperial County’s water canals

Photo: IID Operations Coordinator Pablo Cortez, left, holds an adult grass carp while Tony Perez,…

4 days ago

Colorado to shield thousands of acres of wetlands, miles of streams after U.S. Supreme Court left them vulnerable

The Blanca Wildlife Habitat Area, located in the San Luis Valley, is about 15 square…

4 days ago

In Millions of Homes, High Fluoride in Tap Water May Be a Concern

Top: Water tower in Comfort, Texas. Visual: Marcus Wennrich/ iStock/Getty Images Plus In communities across…

6 days ago

Delta College’s Aqua Ducks are big winners at H2O Hackathon

A San Joaquin Delta College student squad called the Aqua Ducks emerged top prize winner…

7 days ago

As climate change amplifies urban flooding, here’s how communities can become ‘sponge cities’

By Franco Montalto, Drexel University “When it rains, it pours” once was a metaphor for…

1 week ago