Photos of the Week – July 3, 2025

Reminder – we are hosting two public field days at the Platte River Prairies and Niobrara Valley Preserve, respectively. The first is July 12 and the second is August 2. Read here for more information on both of them and click here for a detailed agenda of the Platte River Prairies event. These will be great opportunities to explore and learn about prairies with experts in a variety of topics. The Niobrara Valley Preserve day will include bison tours. Please RSVP so we know how to plan for you and can notify you if we have to adjust to weather or other events!

I’ve made a couple trips to the Niobrara Valley Preserve lately. I didn’t have a ton of time for exploration and photography on either trip, but at a place like that, it doesn’t take long to find a lot. Here are some photos from those recent visits.

Prairie wild rose, bird tracks, and sandy prairie.
Bull bison on recently-burned prairie.
Lark sparrow with captured grasshopper.
Ornate box turtle tracks in the sand.
Monarch caterpillar on common milkweed with NVP Stewardship Manager Carson Schultz.
Prairie fame-flower (Phemeranthus parviflorus).
Stiff greenthread (Thelesperma filifolium).
Longhorn beetle on upright prairie coneflower (Ratibida columnifera).

During my last trip, I got to help with some moth and butterfly surveys. Moth experts set up lights and traps overnight and spent much of their night capturing and photographing the species that visited. I helped for a while, but was in bed by midnight. In the morning, I photographed a few moths that were still hanging around before we picked up our nets and headed out to find butterflies.

Io moth (Automeris io).
Modest sphinx moth (Pachysphinx modesta).

Thistles get a bad rap. Sure, we have some invasive thistle species in Nebraska that are problematic, but we also have some fantastic native species that are incredible resources for wildlife (vertebrate and invertebrate) – as well as being attractive wildflowers. I photographed two of those native species at NVP this month.

Platte thistle (Cirsium canescens).
Wasp foraging for nectar on Platte thistle.
Blister beetles (Nemognatha sp.) on Platte thistle.
Wavy-leaf thistle (Cirsium undulatum).

Carson Schultz, NVP’s stewardship manager, has been experimenting with a combination of patch-burn grazing and rotational grazing for a while now. That often involves burning portions of multiple Sandhills pastures and then rotating cattle through those – grazing each pasture for about a month-and-a-half. The burned areas of each pasture get grazed much more intensively than the unburned, creating extra habitat heterogeneity.

In addition, the ability of cattle to choose what they want across pastures that are hundreds of acres in size, as well as between burned and unburned areas, means the animals have a nearly unlimited diet selection. It’s fascinating to watch what they choose to eat and what they don’t. Their choices vary by the day, largely because they’re always looking for plants that are at a growth stage that provides the most tender, nutritious food. The cattle are eating primarily grasses, but the mix in other plants as well.

Upright prairie coneflower in burned/grazed prairie.

In the pasture I explored, the prairie had been burned in the spring and cattle entered in mid-May. They’d been grazing for over a month and had kept the grasses in the burned area pretty short. Their selective grazing, though, meant there was a lot of variety in the height of the vegetation, which created great wildlife habitat, as well as a fun place to photograph. In the unburned portion of the same pasture, the grasses were much taller and very little grazing was taking place. As a whole, then, the pasture provided a good mix of habitat structure and lots of blooming plants.

Cattle grazing with purple coneflower (Echinacea angustifolia) and lead plant (Amorpha canescens).
Abundant lead plant with cattle.

Here’s one last plug for our public field days – if you like what you see in these photos, come see it for yourself! Both the Platte River Prairies and Niobrara Valley Preserve events will feature tours with staff and a chance to learn about ecology and prairie stewardship. We hope to see you there!

Cattle staring at me while I explore.

Photo of the Week – October 5, 2018

Bison are pretty tough.  At our Niobrara Valley Preserve, and at many other sites in the upper Great Plains, bison make it through the winter without any supplementary feed. They just eat cured grasses, grow a thick coat, and plow through snow and ice as needed.  Bison don’t need humans to help with calving, and they protect their babies very effectively from predators.  It shouldn’t be surprising, then, that animals like that would be completely unfazed by a little rain.

Yesterday, some of our Nebraska staff took a trip up to The Nature Conservancy’s Broken Kettle Grasslands in the northern Loess Hills of Iowa.  Land steward James Baker led us on a very scenic hike before a band of cold rainy weather moved in.  We then piled into some trucks with James and Director of Stewardship Scott Moats and went to visit the resident bison herd.  The bison were peacefully grazing as we drove up, despite the pouring rain.  When we stopped, a small group came over to check us out. Here are a few photos of those rugged bison, who didn’t need to huddle in dry and heated pickups to stay comfortable.

P.S. In case you had any doubt about my nerd qualifications, here’s one more piece of evidence.  As I was working up these photos (in the backseat of a truck heading back to Nebraska) yesterday, I was looking closely at the streaks of rain captured by my camera.  Based on the size of a bison calf’s eye and the length of the rain streaks closest to those eyes, I estimated that my camera captured about an inch of raindrop fall during the 1/250 of a second the camera’s shutter was open.  Now, I’d want to do some actual measuring of bison calves’ eyes to check this, but based on that rough estimation, those raindrops were falling about 250 inches per second.  Now, if I convert that number to miles per hour, I get 14.2 mph.  A quick online search found that raindrops are estimated to fall at about 20 mph.  I was pretty close!!  I mean, given that I don’t really know how big a bison eye is or how close those raindrop streaks were to that eye…  (NERD)