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Hopewell Culture National Historical Park People of the Hopewell culture built these mounds nearly 2,000 years ago.
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Hopewell Culture National Historical Park
Monitoring Birds
 
A national park scientist from the Heartland Network monitors birds in a grassland.

NPS Heartland Network

National Park Service scientists and volunteers conduct inventories of bird species nesting in our national parks.

NPS: The Good Steward

Science plays an important role in the management of national parks. One method park rangers use to measure the health of a natural habitat is inventorying the birds that nest there. Each kind of bird will only nest in an area if its specific habitat requirements are in place. Does the forest have a healthy understory? Does the grassland have a natural composition of native prairie plants? These are the kinds of requirements that our breeding birds look for before they choose the park as a nesting site.

During each nesting season, national park rangers and volunteers use careful scientific procedures to monitor the diversity and numbers of birds that nest at the park. If a type of bird declines in numbers or a new species begins nesting here, it can tell park managers whether the park’s various habitats are healthy, improving or being degraded. Like a good steward, the National Park Service monitors and protects our most significant natural and historical sites for the sake of all Americans.

Rudbeckia hirta (black-eyed susa) in full-bloom at Mound City Group.
Vital Signs Monitoring at Hopewell Culture:
Learn more about the specific vital signs monitored at Hopewell Culture
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Camp Sherman barrack located atop a mound at Mound City Group.

Did You Know?
Camp Sherman, a World War I training camp, was located in part at Mound City Group. Most of the earthworks were significantly impacted from camp construction- a new building was erected every 20 minutes.

Last Updated: December 22, 2010 at 09:24 MST