Calumet
BioBlitz
By Don Parker
As if to pull in diners for a Friday-night
fish-fry on the shores of Wolf Lake, a sign along Avenue
O proclaimed "BioBlitz" in big, red letters.
The sign heralded the Calumet Biodiversity Blitz
a biological inventory on steroids.

On August 23, more than 150
expert scientists assembled at Wolf Lake, Eggers
Woods, and Powderhorn Marsh and Prairie on the South
Side of Chicago to identify and record as many living
organisms as possible within 24 hours. The purpose
of this major undertaking was to underline the extraordinary
range of creatures still living in green pockets
amidst this collage of factories, warehouses, forest
preserves, residences, and highways.
Three intrigued boys crowded
around Rosalyn Johnson of the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency as she sorted bee specimens with
tweezers. "Those little green ones are bees?!"
the boys asked in amazement. Nodding her head, Johnson
then pointed out the leg sacks of another specimen,
full of pollen from the invasive purple loosestrife
plant.
Johnson described the precarious
balance of life here in the Calumet region. While
the place abounds with species, the threat of continued
invasion by killer pest species is everywhere.



Indeed, one chief goal of the
BioBlitz is to publicly launch Phase II of the Calumet
Stewardship Initiative, a comprehensive education
and outreach program aimed at fostering long-term
participation by local residents in efforts to rehabilitate
and protect the region's natural resources. One
goal of the initiative is to assemble 4,800 acres
into the Calumet Open Space Reserve. Though a full
inventory takes many years, the BioBlitz provides
a mass of information (and some much-needed publicity)
as conservationists continue to develop plans for
habitat recovery.
Johnson: "I ran into a
guy in the woods on his hands and knees, with his
nose five inches from a pan of soapy water and a
carrion beetle. I love that I can walk around the
woods and bump into all these experts."





Left
photo by Joe Rakoczy.
Field Museum president John
McCarter opened the event. Marcia Jimenez, commissioner
of Chicago's Department of the Environment, remarked
that the BioBlitz signifies "the beginning
of identifying the richness that exists in this
part of Calumet."
The event mixed scientists and
neighbors. Said Chris Merenowicz, superintendent
of conservation at the Forest Preserve District
of Cook County, "A lot of young kids get involved
in a chosen field of science this way. They see
this firsthand, and a lightbulb goes off in their
heads."

Photo
by Rob Curtis, The Early Birder.
At the science tent, late into
the night, researchers picked through Petri dishes,
sorting insects into orders, scouring leaves for
mites, scanning monitors for protozoans. All the
while, soil invertebrates, projected on the ceiling
of the tent, danced for all to see.
"Where should I put this?"
cried a volunteer, holding a bluegill in a jug.
"Can we have some more alcohol?!" called
another from across the tent. "I'm never going
swimming in a lake again," declared another,
picking through a dish of tiny creatures taken from
Wolf Lake.



Mark Bee, a scientific illustrator
with the University of Illinois who volunteered
to cover protozoans one-celled organisms
returned from Eggers Woods with vials of
blackish-brown water. "It was nasty, smelly,
black, oily material which of course is my
favorite place to go but it was mostly dried
up," he said.



Right
photo by Jim Flynn, Root Resources.
"It's like "Planet
of the Apes,'" remarked Paul Marcum, botanist
with the Illinois Natural History Survey (INHS),
as one of the vascular plant teams picked its way
through vegetation surrounding a large cement pillar
left over from a decommissioned Nike Missile Base.
Marcum has been studying this
region with other INHS researchers over the past
two years. So far, the scientists have found seven
threatened or endangered species, including the
early lady's tresses orchid. Marcum has also noticed
an increase in the invasive Eurasian millfoil here.
He momentarily disappeared in a thicket of purple
loosestrife and reemerged to declare he'd found
the high-quality swamp loosestrife.
Corinne Chengary, who lives
just down the block in Hegewisch, brought her family
to the BioBlitz. "We walk out here all the
time, and come fishing. But today, we can learn
about what really goes on here."
Unofficially, the BioBlitz counted
1,815 species some rare and unexpected
but the final tally will likely be higher as scientists
continue to analyze specimens. Look for more results
in our winter issue.
