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Konza Prairie Biological Station offers a window into Kansas’ past

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Daniel Caudill
KMUW

In 1823, the grasslands would have covered much of the state, which was then part of the Missouri Territory. The prairie has gotten smaller, but what remains provides a window into our past.
To get an idea of what much of Kansas looked like in 1823, you need only to take a walk through the Konza Prairie Biological Station near Manhattan.
“… This side is burned every two years, and this side, historically, is burned every 20 years …”
That’s John Blair. He’s a biology professor at Kansas State University and the director of the biological station, which has more than 8,600 acres of land.
The station hosts a herd of about 200 bison who graze the area, and their activity, combined with controlled burning,  helps researchers better understand the history of the Tallgrass Prairie and how to preserve it.
“We can look at how bison grazing and fire interact to influence the heterogeneity of the landscape and the plant communities that occur there,” Blair said.
Before white settlers arrived in Kansas in 1827, the Tallgrass Prairie covered 170 million acres of what’s now called North America — going all the way to modern-day Indiana, Ohio and even Canada.
But the tallgrass started to decline due to settlements and, primarily, agriculture.
And after nearly two centuries of farming in the region, the Tallgrass Prairie today is only about 4% of its peak size, with the bulk of it right here in eastern Kansas.
So why was Kansas’ piece of the Tallgrass Prairie saved from the plow?
“Because the Flint Hills were too rocky and had too much topographic relief to effectively be plowed,” Blair said.
Along with the once massive swaths of tallgrass came an abundance of grassland birds, like the now-endangered prairie chicken.
There would have also been a much higher number of herd animals roaming the state in the 1820s, like elk and bison.
And Bison work almost like nature’s ecologists, creating depressions in the ground called bison wallows that hold water and are home to diverse wildlife.
“So these wallows in the springtime become these temporary springtime ephemeral ponds, which is good for amphibians and aquatic insects,” Blair said.
Those herd animals attracted predators, many of which we no longer see in Kansas today. That includes timberwolves, black bears, and even grizzly bears.
One of the biggest changes to Kansas’ landscape over the last 200 years is the increased presence of trees and shrubs, or what Blair calls “woody vegetation.”
“Historically, fires were an integral part of why the tall grass prairie was tall grass prairie and not forest,” Blair said, “and it burned frequently from both natural causes – lightning induced fires – and because the indigenous people, the Native Americans here, used fire extensively.”
Today, the practice of burning the tallgrass is still employed at the Konza Prairie Biological Station and elsewhere in the Flint Hills.
It’s all about keeping the grass healthy and making sure that woody vegetation doesn’t creep in and take over the state’s last remaining sea of tallgrass – an iconic piece of Kansas history.
“Conserving that part of our American heritage, I think, is important for social and cultural reasons,” Blair said, “but also because it harbors a lot of biodiversity that we don’t find in other ecosystems.”
https://www.kmuw.org/the-range/2023-11-10/konza-prairie-biological-station-offers-a-window-into-kansas-past

Lettuce Eat Local: Oh baby, we’ve bean busy

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Amanda Miller
Columnist
Lettuce Eat Local

How do you start writing an article about a baby that’s not born yet?
I guess something like this.
This is officially my “baby back-up article,” the one I’m wrote a week ahead — although I ended up having plenty of time. But since you’re reading it, it means Miller Baby #2/Mini-Wheat has been born!
Unfortunately, that’s all I can tell you at this point. Fortunately, I have a feeling I’ll at least mention it in the future….
But for now, we wait in anticipation. I’m in no rush; I’m not due until November 7, another two days at the time I’m writing this (but it has come and gone by the time I’m submitting it). Benson was a week late, and so I learned not to watch the calendar with bated breath — I have all sorts of things penciled in as options, unless of course I’m having a baby. Benson was also a traumatic labor, birth, and after-birth, so I’m emotionally in no rush either.
Not that the baby really takes into much account how I’m feeling about things; it’ll come when it comes. If the amount of contractions I’ve been having the past couple days are any indication, it won’t be terribly long, but then again we know babies have a mind of their own. My current goal is to pray for joy instead of anxiety when things really kick into action, and to let my body rest in the meantime.
And what better way to cultivate joy than eat chocolate cake? The birthing center where we hope to deliver actually bakes a cake in celebration of the baby’s arrival, which I love so much — except I don’t love cake. I know, that doesn’t match with what I just said. I’m just picky about my cake. It has to be chocolate, and it can’t be messing around: it really has to be deep dark chocolate.
Which is why one of my favorite cakes is bean cake. Sounds amazing, doesn’t it? But don’t knock it till you’ve tried it. Chocolate bean cakes tend to be heavy, moist, and super chocolatey, but also oddly healthy, so good news for people who choose to nosh on it at any point in the day from pre-breakfast bite to bedtime snack. Hypothetically, of course.
I had someone ask me last week if I could handle coffee and chocolate now, as she couldn’t for her entire pregnancies. While they were both thoroughly banned for my first trimester, and coffee is a little sketchy still, chocolate has one hundred percent made it back into my life. I would say my consumption has reached excessive levels, but then again, I’m nine months pregnant, so I figure I can do what I want.
Saying I want chocolate bean cake, however, doesn’t mean it’s another one of those odd hormonal cravings. It’s not like I’m dumping a can of pinto beans on a slice of cake and drizzling chocolate sauce on it — in fact, the beans get so blended and incorporated into the cake that you would never know they’re there if I weren’t telling you. They add protein and fiber, yes, but also an unexpected richness and brownie-esque factor.
Having this kind of cake around also brings me a sweet (pun intended) nostalgia, as I haven’t made it much, if at all, since Benson’s birth. I had made a peppermint-spiked batch right before he was born, and coming home from the NICU a week later to find cake in the fridge was a gift to my sore, tired, hungry self.
This time I’m getting a head start on enjoying it, because why wait? I think I’ve made four batches in as many weeks, freezing some each time in preparation for the days to come. Benson also revels in eating cake at random times, and I’m sure we’ll continue as we celebrate the arrival of his little sibling.

 

Chocolate Brownie Bean Cake

Y ou might want to frost this cake, or you might not. Choose your favorite frosting (almost any flavor will do!), or simply drizzle on melted chocolate or warmed peanut butter.
Prep tips: I’m usually picky about cooking beans from dried instead of using canned, but since they get blended into oblivion here, it really doesn’t matter either way. And let’s be honest, I just had a baby, so I’m going the convenience route for now.

1 ½ cups [1 15-oz can] cooked black beans, drained
4 eggs
½ cup honey
½ cup cocoa powder
¼ cup almond butter

1 teaspoon baking powder

½ teaspoon baking soda
¼ teaspoon salt
a splash of vanilla
½ cup sour cream or ricotta ½ cup chopped dark chocolate

Blend up everything except chocolate chips until completely smooth. Transfer to a greased 8” or 9” baking pan, and sprinkle with chocolate chips. Bake at 350° for 25-30 minutes, until center is firmed. Chill completely before slicing or frosting. Pop the whole thing into the freezer, covered with plastic wrap and foil; or slice and freeze in slices in an airtight container or wrapped individually in plastic wrap. Or just eat.

 

Still room for more names on memorial

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SOUTH HUTCHINSON, Kan. — Kelly Danyluk with the Reno County Veterans’ Memorial said there is still room for more names on the memorial in South Hutchinson.

“A little over 3000 names we have room for,” Danyluk said. “They’re trickling in slowly. I have about 70 right now and when I get up to another 315, we’ll engrave another panel.”

The new names are alphabetized per panel going forward. The original list was alphabetized throughout. There are about 14,000 names out there right now.

“Go online and submit a name at https://renocountyveterans.com/,” Danyluk said. “You can go to the City of South Hutchinson office. They have a paper form you can fill out. They’ll take that and get it to us.”

A Veteran needs to have served in the military and be born in Reno County or have lived in Reno County for at least 10 years. They’re hoping to engrave a new panel each year.

“We did one last summer,” Danyluk said. “It turned out really good. If we have enough names, we’ll do one again in the spring or summer of this next year.”

They are still looking for donations, particularly to keep putting up fresh flags, as the Kansas wind makes them not last very long. The memorial is at Discovery Loop in South Hutchinson near the intersection of K-96, K-61, and U.S. 50, west of the Love’s truck stop.

KU News: Research partnership shows parenting skills more effective at reuniting families

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From the Office of Public Affairs | http://www.news.ku.edu

Headlines

Contact: Mike Krings, KU News Service, 785-864-8860, [email protected], @MikeKrings

Research partnership shows parenting skills more effective at reuniting families

LAWRENCE — Substance use has a long list of negative effects on families, especially those with young children, including social and emotional damages and even removal from the home. A research partnership including the University of Kansas has found a parenting skills program to be more effective than child welfare services as usual in reunifying children with families, while improving the health of young children as well.

Researchers from KU’s School of Social Welfare worked with social service agencies in Oklahoma for more than 15 years to test several evidence-based interventions to enhance the safety, permanency and well-being of children and families affected by substance use. Findings from the researchers’ recent evaluation of their five-year initiative, the Oklahoma Partnership Child Well-Being Initiative – Phase 3 (OPI-3), showed families who took part in a research-backed parenting skills program demonstrated statistically significant improvements in both child and parent domains. Together with their Oklahoma community partners, the researchers have secured funding through the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Health Resources & Services Administration (HRSA) to further implement a statewide initiative, Oklahoma Infant-Toddler Court Program (OK ITCP).

OPI-3

For OPI-3, KU researchers worked with the Oklahoma Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services and the federal funder, U.S. Administration for Children, Youth and Families, Children’s Bureau. The project served young children up to 4 years old and their families who were child welfare involved and substance-affected in Oklahoma County between December 2019 and July 2022. Eighty-four cases were enrolled in OPI-3, serving 112 adults and 171 children.

“We want to know what works, under what conditions and for what populations. Our projects focus on serving child welfare involved families with children either at risk of removal or who have already experienced removal from their birth families,” said Kiley Liming, KU associate researcher senior and project evaluator. “Together with our community partners, we want to provide services for the nation’s most vulnerable populations — services that meet not only the child’s needs, but the parents as well.”

The evidence-based intervention Attachment and Biobehavioral Catch-Up, known as ABC, is a 10-session parenting skills program designed to enhance child-caregiver attachment through parental sensitivity, nurturance and decreasing intrusiveness, ultimately reducing toxic stress in children. OPI-3 participants received one of three versions of ABC, based on the child’s age.

Both parents and children showed positive outcomes. Liming and Jody Brook, professor of social welfare, found that the OPI-3 children had high rates of trauma exposure, with nearly 40% reporting exposure to at least two adverse childhood experiences at program enrollment. After receiving the ABC intervention, OPI-3 children had statistically significant improvements in their social-emotional development and had positive improvement trends in communication and problem-solving. OPI-3 caregivers who completed the intervention demonstrated significant improvements in decreased intrusive behaviors and positive improvement trends on both the sensitivity and positive regard domains. The ABC caregivers also had significant improvements in parental self-efficacy and responsiveness to their child’s crying cues.

“Ultimately, our goal is to reunify families affected by substance use when it is safe to do so. If safe reunification is not possible, then we want the child to achieve safe and lasting permanency,” Liming said. “We want to be sure these interventions are helping children and families, and our results are promising.”

Liming and Brook rigorously examined the impacts of the ABC intervention; the impact analysis included 66 children who took part in OPI-3, and their progress was compared to 139 children who received traditional child welfare services.

The impact evaluation examined three child welfare outcomes:

· If the child experienced repeat maltreatment reports after study participation.

· If the child experienced substantiated repeat maltreatment after study participation.

· If children were removed from the home, if they had increased chances of reunification and if they reunified at faster rates than peers who did not take part in the program.

 

Results showed that children who took part in the ABC intervention did not statistically differ from their counterparts in likelihood of subsequent or substantiated maltreatment reports – regardless of ABC age curriculum received. However, for children who had experienced removal, results showed significant improvements in both likelihood of and time to reunification. In order from youngest to oldest age groups of the ABC intervention, 30% of participants in the respective group experienced reunification by 431 days (modified ABC), 271 days (ABC-Infant), and 378 days (ABC-Toddler), respectively. For the control group, 30% of children experienced reunification 766 days after removal.

“Those numbers speak volumes about how long young children who have been affected by substance use are spending in out-of-home care,” Liming said. “We want a safe and stable child-caregiver attachment to happen. When we look at the impacts of our program, we find distinct positive child welfare outcomes.”

The research partners also showed ABC can be effective via virtual delivery. The ABC intervention traditionally is delivered in-home and in-person, but the COVID-19 pandemic necessitated a shift to telehealth.

The OPI-3 initiative was the latest to show positive outcomes in helping reunite families affected by substance abuse. Brook has led evaluation partnerships with Oklahoma agencies for more than 15 years, which resulted in increased rates of family reunification.

Oklahoma Infant Toddler Courts

KU researchers will also be part of a new partnership to determine the effectiveness of Infant Toddler Courts intended to safely reunite families with young children. The Oklahoma Department of Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services has received a five-year, $3.1 million grant from HRSA to enhance and expand Infant Toddler Courts, also known as Safe Babies, throughout Oklahoma. The initiative will enhance the two existing Oklahoma specialty courts in Tulsa and Payne counties and will expand to additional sites.

The partnership will deliver the evidence-based Safe Babies Approach with eligible families. Similar to OPI-3, the OK ITCP aims to increase reunification and achieve lasting permanency by improving parenting skills, reducing trauma for children — prenatally through age 3 — and providing equitable services and resources to vulnerable families. Liming and Brook said the goal is to build a sustainable program that helps reduce and repair harm and safely reunite families while serving as a model for similar programs across the country.

“We’re very excited and hopeful for this program. Our current sites have good outcomes so far,” Liming said. “As the initiative’s evaluators, we want to implement an evaluation that will track and produce concrete outcomes for our Oklahoma sites — to show them that their hard work has paid off and that we can provide effective services to vulnerable populations while safely reunifying families or increasing lasting permanency.”

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KU News Service

1450 Jayhawk Blvd.

Lawrence KS 66045

Phone: 785-864-3256

Fax: 785-864-3339

[email protected]

http://www.news.ku.edu

 

Erinn Barcomb-Peterson, director of news and media relations, [email protected]

 

Today’s News is a free service from the Office of Public Affairs