Ask A Kansan

Wild Prairie with Matt Bain | Conserving Kansas


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What if the prairie — that "flat, boring" stretch you drive through on I-70 — is actually one of the most critical and disappearing ecosystems on the planet?


Matt Bain, Director of Conservation for The Nature Conservancy in Kansas, makes a compelling case that the Kansas prairie isn't just beautiful — it's the foundation of clean water, healthy soil, thriving wildlife, and the ranching culture that holds it all together. A born-and-raised Kansan who grew up farming in Ness County, Matt brings 22 years of professional conservation experience and a deep personal land ethic to this conversation. From the dancing mating rituals of the Greater and Lesser Prairie Chicken to a 10,000-year-old kill site hiding in plain sight on the Smoky Valley Ranch, this episode is packed with the kind of stories that make you see Kansas differently.


Highlights


  • Conservation isn't non-use — it's wise use, and Kansas farmers and ranchers have been living that land ethic for generations
  • 62% of all North American grasslands are gone; Kansas has only 20% of its native prairie remaining
  • The three ecological drivers that created and maintain Kansas prairie: grazing, drought, and fire
  • Two-thirds of all Lesser Prairie Chickens on Earth now exist in a narrow strip of land between Hays and the Colorado border
  • Prairie Chickens are a "canary in the coal mine" for ecosystem health — when they disappear, so does clean water, healthy forage, and soil
  • The Flint Hills alone loses 2.2 million acre-feet of water annually to encroaching trees and shrubs
  • The 12 Mile Creek site on Smoky Valley Ranch rewrote North American history — a spear point embedded in a 10,000-year-old bison skeleton proved humans were here far earlier than anyone believed
  • Ecotourists from 20+ countries visit Smoky Valley Ranch annually for Lesser Prairie Chicken viewing tours
  • Kansas was the first state to ban sport hunting of feral hogs — a counterintuitive move that actually worked
  • How to support conservation: become a member of The Nature Conservancy, buy a duck stamp, or purchase a hunting or fishing license


Chapters


  • 0:00 — Cold Open: Prairie Chickens doing their thing
  • 1:56 — Meet Matt Bain
  • 4:37 — What Conservation Actually Means
  • 5:52 — Why Matt Chose This Path
  • 8:38 — Grasslands Are Disappearing Fast
  • 10:25 — Misconceptions About Conservation
  • 12:37 — Cattle, Fire, and Prairie Balance
  • 17:46 — Raising Kids with a Land Ethic
  • 20:49 — Why Prairie Chickens Matter
  • 28:32 — From Kansas Wildlife & Parks to The Nature Conservancy
  • 32:49 — Ecotourism and the Wonders of the Prairie
  • 37:11 — Smoky Valley Ranch: History Beneath Your Feet
  • 41:56 — Tracing Spring Water Back to Its Source
  • 43:38 — The Audio Tour at Smoky Valley Ranch
  • 44:11 — How to Support the Nature Conservancy
  • 46:14 — Hosts Wrap Up & Key Terms Defined
  • 48:25 — Segment: Name That Kansas Even-Toed Ungulate
  • 50:15 — Bison & Whitetail Deer
  • 53:35 — Mule Deer & Elk
  • 56:18 — Pronghorn & Feral Hogs
  • 1:02:28 — Wrap Up & Credits
  • 1:03:17 — Subscribe, Merch & Newsletter


Resources


  • The Nature Conservancy in Kansas — nature.org
  • Kansas Mammal Atlas — Sternberg Museum of Natural History, Fort Hays State University
  • Smoky Valley Ranch — Nature Conservancy property and Lesser Prairie Chicken stronghold
  • Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) — USDA Farm Service Agency
  • Duck Stamps — Purchase at the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service
  • Ask a Kansan Episode 29 on the Ogallala Aquifer featuring Rex Buchanan


Learn more about the podcast at askakansan.com!


This show is part of the ICT Podcast Network, for more information, visit
ictpod.net


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Ask A KansanBy Ask A Kansan