USDA: Minnesota in top 5 for conservation easements

The USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service says Minnesota is one of the top five states in the nation for participation in the conservation easement program.

Easements are agreements with landowners to take poor quality farm land out of production and restore it as conservation habitat.

On Tuesday, state and federal officials marked the 1,000th easement in Minnesota at a ceremony near Moorhead, Minn.

NRCS Assistant State Conservationist Lanette Dietrich says the easements are important because they create permanent habitat including wetlands.

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"They provide us migratory species habitat, wildlife habitat, they're probably the epitome of a water quality activity we can place on agricultural land," Dietrich said.

She says the wetlands filter water to remove sediment and nutrients that flow off of farm fields.

Landowners are paid for removing the land from from production and NRCS pays a share of the cost of restoring the land.

The 1,000 easements in Minnesota protect 129,000 acres of land.

Deitrich said demand for the program as high. In the most recent signup this year, NRCS approved $2 million in projects for Minnesota, but that covered only one-fourth of the offers from landowners who wanted to participate in the program.