By Chris Neill — Sandplain grassland managers from New York and New England met September 25 and 26 on Long Island share knowledge, expertise, and experiences about coastal grasslands to help advance conservation and adaptive management. Sandplain grasslands of the Northeast are one of the region’s most ecologically and culturally iconic, rare, and unique ecosystems. But pressures such as climate change, urbanization, regrowth of woody vegetation, invasive species, and sea level rise all create challenges for maintaining grasslands and their biodiversity.
The group met at the Wertheim National Wildlife Refuge Visitors Center in Shirley, NY. Polly Weigand, Stewardship Manager for the Central Pine Barrens Joint Planning and Policy Commission, spearheaded the meeting organization.
The meeting included field trips to grassland fragments at the Sayville National Wildlife Refuge, the Long Island Native Plant Initiative’s propagation facilities and restored prairie at the Sisters of St. Joseph in Brentwood, NY, the remnant Hempstead Plains Grassland and the Friends of Hempstead Plains‘ visitor center, and grassland restoration efforts at the Greentree Foundation’s former Whitney Estate in Manhasset, NY.