Houston鈥檚 pocket prairies: Natural solutions to unnatural flooding
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| Houston
Deep in the heart of the dense steel and glass jungle of Houston鈥檚 Medical Center district, you can catch glimpses of what the city looked like some 400 years ago.聽
Tall grasses rise up from one corner, sheltering more than 70 different plant and flower species. It looks messy, swampy, and wild 鈥 especially compared to the pristine grass lawns that surround many Houston buildings. It looks like coastal prairie.
Prairie like this covered coastal Texas and Louisiana for centuries, stretching from modern-day New Orleans all the way to Corpus Christi. Covering 9 million acres and supporting iconic flora and fauna like bluebonnets, monarch butterflies, and longhorn cattle, it evolved to survive, and thrive, in a corner of the world subject to both frequent flooding and drought.聽
Why We Wrote This
Humans are innovators and tend to look to technology to solve problems. But increasingly, people are turning to the natural world for solutions as well. For Houston, that means reintroducing the prairie. This story is part of an occasional Monitor series on 鈥Climate Realities.鈥
The prairie couldn鈥檛 survive the growth of cities and agriculture, however, and today less than 1% of the original coastal ecosystem remains. But as the region has experienced four 鈥500 year鈥 rain events in the past five years 鈥 including this month鈥檚 Tropical Storm Imelda 鈥 a prairie renaissance has been blossoming in Houston.聽
鈥淧rairies are a completely different way of thinking,鈥 says Jim Blackburn, professor of environmental law at Rice University in Houston. 鈥淲e tend to be biased towards technological solutions and engineering solutions rather than natural solutions. We don鈥檛 think of nature solving our problems.鈥
But that鈥檚 starting to change in Houston, where local officials, conservation groups, and even developers have been talking up prairies and their benefits, from detaining and filtering stormwater, to nourishing wildlife, sequestering carbon, and improving mental health. More than 50 miniaturized 鈥減ocket prairies鈥 have been planted around the Houston metro area since 2008.
鈥淭hat alone is not the answer,鈥 says Professor Blackburn, who also co-directs the center on severe storm prediction, education, and evacuation from disasters at Rice. 鈥淏ut I think it鈥檚 part of a long-term solution.鈥
鈥淎 touchy subject鈥
While pocket prairies effectively mirror the pre-settlement Houston landscape, in many ways they are pale imitations 鈥 prairies manicured and airbrushed for the modern age.
Some 20 miles east of the Medical Center, in the suburb of Deer Park, is the real thing. The 51-acre Deer Park Prairie, home to more than 400 species of plants, is 鈥減ristine鈥 鈥 never farmed, developed, or touched by humans in any way, according to Della Barbato, director of education at the Native Prairies Association of Texas (NPAT). To the west, in neighboring Waller County, more than 20,000 acres of original prairie has been protected by the Katy Prairie Conservancy.聽
In addition to supporting native wildlife, native prairies can sequester of carbon per acre in its root systems, which can reach up to 15 feet underground.
They also can retain significantly more water during heavy rain events than residential and commercial land.
鈥淲e call them the hardest working ecosystems in the world,鈥 says Laura Huffman, regional director of The Nature Conservancy in Texas.
When the NPAT bought the Deer Park Prairie in 2013, it was bordered by some homes, a cemetery, and fields. Today the fields have been replaced by subdivisions. Private land around the Katy Prairie that used to cost a few hundred dollars an acre can now cost tens of thousands. And while those prairies are protected, in a business-friendly state like Texas there is always a tension between environmental protection and economic development.
It鈥檚 鈥渁 touchy subject,鈥 Ms. Barbato admits.
鈥淚t鈥檚 really difficult to see the sprawl,鈥 she adds. But 鈥渋f we can preserve or restore prairie at the same time then that would be a win-win for everyone.鈥
鈥淎 new attitude鈥
There is a general consensus among ecologists and urban planners that prairies can be beneficial, though research has yet to quantify the benefits for Houston. There is likely a limit to their floodwater storage potential. During Harvey, for instance, Harris County鈥檚 prairie wetlands only absorbed about 5% of the rain that fell, according to one estimate.
But the importance of pocket prairies, advocates say, should also include their educational and symbolic value.
When Houston conservation groups began working together on prairie restoration in 2009, 鈥渙ne of the first things that people said is, 鈥楴o one knows prairies around here,鈥欌 recalls Jaime Gonz谩lez, who manages urban conservation programs in Houston for The Nature Conservancy.
鈥淲e knew that if we鈥檙e going to uplift this story [of prairies and their benefits] we needed to put prairies throughout the city,鈥 he adds.
Schools and highly trafficked areas like Hermann Park 鈥 one of the most visited city parks in the country 鈥 were targeted as sites for pocket prairies. Local landscape architect Beth Clark worked with the Katy Prairie Conservancy to create a 鈥渘ine natives鈥 project identifying nine attractive native plants that the average Houstonian could find and plant in their garden 鈥 a way for locals to build prairie-like greenspaces that are easier to maintain and not as wild-looking as genuine prairie.
Tapping Texas pride
Conservation groups have also seized on the connection prairies have to Texas identity, focusing on what Ms. Barbato calls 鈥渉eart-grabber species,鈥 such as bluebonnets (the state flower of Texas) and milkweed (the exclusive nursery of the monarch butterfly).
鈥淚f you take these icons of Texas, and you can reconnect it with the landscape, that鈥檚 when people will become fervent defenders,鈥 says Mr. Gonz谩lez.
In a sense, advocates say, prairies offer Houston residents a connection to their past. Longhorn cattle historically grazed on the prairie. And the prairie鈥檚 tall grass even helped secure Texas independence, on Mexican General Santa Anna in the pivotal Battle of San Jacinto.
At the same time, advocates see the prairie as key to building resilience into Houston鈥檚 future.
A year after Hurricane Harvey, then-Harris County Judge Ed Emmett called on officials to 鈥減ermanently preserve and protect what remains of the Katy Prairie.鈥
鈥淟et it be a sponge,鈥 he reiterated this past weekend during a panel discussion on Harvey recovery at the Texas Tribune Festival.聽
鈥樷橶e can make ourselves as resilient as possible,鈥 he said, 鈥渂ut we have to work with nature where we can.鈥