The Mississippi River's floodplain forests are dying. The race is on to bring them back.

2025-04-20 10:32:31 source: category:Invest

DE SOTO - At the junction of Wisconsin, Minnesota and Iowa, there's a place called Reno Bottoms, where the Mississippi River spreads out from its main channel into thousands of acres of tranquil backwaters and wetland habitat.

For all its beauty, there's something unsettling about the landscape, something hard to ignore: hundreds of the trees growing along the water are dead.

Billy Reiter-Marolf, a wildlife biologist for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, calls it the boneyard. It’s a popular spot for hunting, fishing and paddling, so people have begun to take notice of the abundance of tall, leafless stumps pointing to the sky.

“Visitors ask me, ‘What’s going on, what’s happening here?’” Reiter-Marolf said. “It just looks so bad.” 

More:Invest

Recommend

Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame

Jason Kelce’s daughter is his biggest fan.Indeed, Kylie Kelce—who shares daughters Wyatt, 5, Elliott

IRS claws back money given to businesses under fraud-ridden COVID-era tax credit program

NEW YORK (AP) — The IRS says it’s making progress with initiatives to claw back money improperly dis

Judge expands Trump’s gag order after ex-president’s social media posts about judge’s daughter

NEW YORK (AP) — The judge in Donald Trump’s hush-money criminal case on Monday declared his daughter