In collaboration with the Platte Basin Timelapse project, Nebraska Game and Parks has released expanded wetlands educational content.
These new resources offer the opportunity to learn about Nebraska's five diverse wetland types and grow one's understanding of their importance to the state, its people, and its wildlife.
Cherry County Wetlands. Photo by: Mariah Lundgren/Platte Basin Timelapse
Expanded content includes:
Five documentary films about Nebraska's wetlands and the wildlife and people who depend on them. These films, created by Platte Basin Timelapse at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, highlight Nebraska's sandhills, playas, saline, riverine, and urban wetlands. Viewers take a journey across the state, meet people working to conserve these spaces, and see landscapes and wildlife few get to experience;
An updated "Guide to Nebraska's Wetlands and their Conservation Needs," available in print and PDF form. The full-color publication covers in-depth 14 Nebraska wetland systems;
A new booklet, "Wetlandology," a child-friendly, activity-filled publication on Nebraska's wetlands and the plants and animals that love them;
Five digital stories from PBT producers Mariah Lundgren, Ethan Freese, Grant Reiner, Dakota Altman, and Brooke Talbott. These ESRI StoryMaps integrate maps, text, photos, and video to generate an interactive learning experience; and
An educator guide to the products and two educational videos with paired lesson plans, which are nearing completion and will be shared soon.
Find all of these resources and more at:
This project was led by the Nebraska Game and Parks Commission and funded by a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency grant. Other project partners included the Nebraska Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit at Nebraska and Ducks Unlimited.
American White Pelicans sit on a muskrat hut in the Nebraska Sandhills. Photo by: Dakota Altman/Platte Basin Timelapse
In Nebraska, our wetlands provide important habitats for 50% of our birds and plants, 100% of our amphibians and fish, a third of our mammals and reptiles, and 70% of threatened or endangered species. In addition to these benefits, they improve water quality, recharge groundwater, protect us from flooding and provide places to recreate.
"In many places, Nebraska's wetlands have suffered losses and face ongoing threats putting their benefits at risk," said Ted LaGrange, Game and Parks' wetlands program manager, who led the project. "We hope sharing these stories about Nebraska's wetlands will help to improve the conservation of these important areas."
Click to learn more about Sandhills Wetlands.