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About The Katy Prairie

Discover The Katy Prairie!
 A broad sweep of land that stretches from just beyond the Houston city limits, west toward Brookshire, andnorthwest toward Hempstead, the Katy Prairie has a decidely unique heritage.  Ranging from the flat coastal plains that girdle Interstate 10 to gently rolling pastures in the northern reaches of the prairie soils that mark the area, this terrain is typical of what is found along much of the upper Texas Gulf Coast.

However, in autumn, just after the crops are in and the land lies fallow, this unassuming Prairie becomes the site of one of the most incredible natural spectacles in North America, as thousands, then millions, of migratory birds arrive - especially waterfowl. For most of them, the Katy Prairie is a winter home until March when they return to nesting areas in the upper Midwest and Canada. Others use the Prairie as a staging area on their way to southerly climates, or may even remain here for the entire year.
Source: Katy Prairie Conservancy

To experience the Katy Prairie, you must wander the back roads. Remember that these lands are private. DO NOT TRESPASS UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES. Go north on Katy-Hockley Cutoff to Longenbaugh Road and the Longenbaugh Waterfowl Pond. Although waterfowl hunting is common in this area, the Longenbaugh Waterfowl Pond has been established by hunting guides as a refuge for ducks and geese. The numbers of dabblers here in winter can be mind-boggling, and Bald Eagles and Northern Harriers are frequently seen scavenging for dead ducks and geese on the levees.
Source: Texas Parks and Wildlife

Katy Prairie Loop map
Map Source: Texas Parks and Wildlife

History of The Katy Prairie

The Katy Prairie lies in the Texas Coastal Plain, and encompasses over a thousand square miles, (Wermund, 1994) bounded by the Brazos River on the southwest, pine-hardwood forest on the north, and the city of Houston on the east.  Historically, the Katy Prairie was characterized as a poorly drained tall-grass prairie subject to periodic fires and containing a considerable amount of wetland areas.
Katy Prarie Conservancy
    Comanche and Karankawa native Americans were the first humans to use the prairie, following the bison herds which grazed the area. The standing ponds were frequented by many thousands of ducks. Up until the end of the nineteenth century, the Katy Prairie remained more or less untouched by Europeans. Around 1870, the first settlers began to raise corn, potatoes, and cattle on the Prairie (Lobpries,1994). At the turn of the century, rice farmers appeared, creating 30-acre fields harvested by hand (Ibid). Sportsmen began to take advantage of the hunting opportunities, hunting the indigenous ducks, curlews, and prairie chickens (Gore, 1194). Small-scale agriculture had only a minor impact on the region, and the Katy Prairie remained primarily a plain/prairie ecosystem. In 1914, George Finlay Simmons described the area as still "a coastal prairie region with few farms and ranches; the only timber lies in strips from a quarter to a half mile wide along Buffalo and Bray’s Bayous. The remainder of the country is flat, uncultivated prairie, sprinkled with small ponds and grassy marshes" (Eubanks, 1994).
    With the escalation of rice farming and population in the 1930’s and 1940’s came an increase in hunting and birding. Ducks remained the most popular species, but hunted species included snipe, cranes, doves, quail, rails, and geese.  The presence of ducks and doves increased, directly due to the habitat availability afforded by the flooded rice fields. However, as farming ate up grassland areas, upland species such as the prairie chicken declined drastically (Gore, 1994).
    Farming advancements during the 1950’s and 1960’s boosted rice farming to a tremendous scale. It was at this time that the snow goose emerged onto the Katy Prairie. Historically, the snow goose wintered in the marshes and prairies along the coast. Vast amounts of available open-water habitat combined with waste rice created by modern farming methods created exceptionally conducive wintering grounds and many thousands of geese moved inland to the new habitat (Lobpries, 1994). Migratory birds increasingly depend upon this habitat as other areas along the Gulf Coast have diminished in size or lost to development.
    Concurrently, developers began to appear on the prairie. The City of Houston experienced a huge growth spurt and began spreading to the west and northwest. From 1978 to 1983, 100,000 acres of the Katy Prairie were converted to urban use, primarily residential, with some industrial and retail. This was coupled with a decline in rice farming, with land use for rice falling 59% in Waller County from 1980-1992 (Henry, 1994).
    Urbanization will have consequences for the future of the prairie, as agricultural use on the Katy Prairie has been consistent with its role as a wildlife habitat for nearly one hundred years. Rice farms in particular provide the wetlands necessary for migratory waterfowl to thrive, while pastures and other croplands provide essential food and cover. Encroaching development puts this function at risk.
Source: Katy Prairie Conservancy
 
Katy Prairie Conservancy - References
Arey, S. 1996. Conversation. Fish and Wildlife Biologist, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Houston, Texas. 20 November.
Bohnen, J. L., and A. M. Hanchek. 1992. Native grass and wildflower seed: an LCMR grant. In Proceedings of the Thirteenth North American Prairie Conference. Ontario, Canada, 6-9 August, pp. 239-241.
Cameron, G. 1996. Impact of exotic species on biodiversity of coastal prairie. Presented at The Coastal Prairie and Native Grasses Symposium. Houston, Texas, 24 October.
Campbell, J. A. 1996. Native Gulf coast prairie restoration project. Presented at The Coastal Prairie and Native Grasses Symposium. Houston, Texas, 24 October.
Chadwick, D. H. 1995. What good is a prairie? Audubon 97(6): 36-46, 114-117.
Eubanks, Ted, "A History and Characterization of the Katy Prairie", Presented at the Katy Prairie Conference, April 29-30, 1994, p.1. Henry, Mary Lou, "Growth Patterns of Houston and the Katy Prairie", Presented at the Katy Prairie Conference, April 29-30, 1994, p. 2. Hatch, S. L., N. G. Gandhi, and L. E. Brown. 1990. Checklist of the vascular plants of Texas. Texas Agricultural Experiment Station, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas, 158 pp.
Honig, R. A., and G. D. Wieland. 1997. The Houston Region Native Grass Seedbank: a natural partnership between right-of-way management and conservation. In: The Sixth International Symposium on Environmental Concerns in Rights-of-Way Management, 24-26 February 1997, New Orleans, Louisiana. Elsevier Science, New York.
Gore, Larry, "The Katy Prairie:  Hunting — Its History and Economic Benefits", Presented at the Katy Prairie Conference, April 29-30, 1994, p.2.
Lobpries, David, "Waterfowl on the Katy Prairie (Utilization & Trends)", Presented at the Katy Prairie Conference, April 29-30, 1994, p.1
McFarlane, Robert, "Birdlife on the Katy Prairie", Katy Prairie Conference, April 29-30, 1994, 8 pp.
Smith, L. 1996. Rare and sensitive natural wetland plant communities of interior Louisiana. Louisiana Natural Heritage Program, Louisiana Department of Wildlife and Fisheries, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, 38 pp.
Stutzenbaker, Charles, 1994, "A Case History of the Peacemeal Degradation of the Texas Coastal Prairie and Marsh Ecosystem", Proceedings from the Katy Prairie Conference, April 29-30, 1994, 9 pp.
Tacha, Thomas C., 1994a, "Wetland Functions and Values in a Prairie Environment", Proceedings from the Katy Prairie Conference, April 29-30, 1994, 4 pp.
Tacha, Thomas C., 1994b, "Wetland Functions and Values in a Prairie Environment", Katy Prairie Conference proceedings, April 29-30, 1994, 3 pp.
Texas Mid-Coast Initiate Team, "Texas Mid-Coast Initiative: Gulf Coast Joint Venture, North American Waterfowl Management Plan", U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Albuquerque, 1990., 27 pp.
Texas Natural Heritage Program. 1993. Plant communities of Texas, series level. Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, Austin, Texas, 26 pp.
Wagner, M., and D. Riskind. 1992. Coastal prairie restoration on state parks. In Abstracts of papers presented at the 27th annual meeting of Texas Chapter of The Wildlife Society. N. Koerth, ed.  Texas Chapter of The Wildlife Society, Austin, Texas, p. 6. Wermund, E.G., "Geology and Physical Features of the Katy Prairie", Presented at the Katy Prairie Conference, April 29-30, 1994, p. 1.