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The Fond du Lac Natural Resources
Program is responsible for the wild rice management and restoration
activities. The primary method of wild rice lake management is by
controlling water levels on the lakes by operating water control
structures (dams), ditch maintenance, and beaver dam management. Two
Technicians work full time on water level management and data
collection. The Program Manager and the other technicians assist on
these activities and also work on restoration planning and
implementation.

Technicians are responsible for operation and
maintenance of the “Cookie Cutter” (pictured above) or sedge mat cutter, two aquatic plant
harvesters (pictured below), and two airboats which are used for
vegetation removal and restoration of wild rice habitat.

Unfortunately, our wild rice
watershed is not what it should be. In the early 1900’s a judicial ditch network was
constructed with the intention of creating more agricultural area.
The hydrologic alterations were not extremely successful at creating
a large increase of agricultural area, areas that were wetlands
simply became a little less wet. The impact to our wild rice
resources was drastic. The ditching resulted in the loss of hundreds
of acres of wild rice habitat. In a very short time it became
apparent that productivity of wild rice was declining due to lower
water levels. The lower water levels allowed competing vegetation
such as cattails and other wetland vegetation to take over areas
that once produced a healthy wild rice crop. As early as 1933, the
state conservation staff noted a significant decline in wild rice
and waterfowl production. Attempts were made by individuals and
agencies to improve conditions for wild rice. Dams were built at
Perch Lake and Rice Portage Lake, but by the 1980’s these structures
were failing or nonexistent. FDL Natural Resources Program began an
ambitious effort to find funding and construct the water control
structures that are in place today.
The construction of the dams was
the first phase of a long-term project to restore wild rice
production. The construction project was a
massive undertaking because of permitting issues, surveying,
permissions from state, county, federal agencies, individual
landowners, allottees, etc. Thanks to the hard work of many people
that still work for us, and others that have moved on, we have
better control of water levels for the wild rice lakes.
The next phase of our restoration
project was to remove competing vegetation.

Through the generous support of the Fond du Lac Reservation, BIA
Circle of Flight Program, and State Lottery Funds we have been able
to purchase several pieces of specialized lake restoration
equipment. The lead machine in this effort is the “Cookie Cutter” or
sedge mat cutter. This barge with 5ft. props on the front does the
rough cut, followed by our two aquatic plant harvesters which are
outfitted with sickle bar cutters and conveyor belts to clean up
after the “Cookie Cutter”. After areas are cut and harvested they
are reseeded with wild rice obtained from harvesters in the fall.
This effort has been extremely successful so far, but hundreds of
acres remain.
There are five primary wild rice
lakes on the Fond du Lac Reservation. The total area on which wild
rice is currently present on these lakes is 832 acres.
Rice Portage Lake
The drainage of this lake since 1922
resulted in the reduction of the original 634 acre lake to only
about 114 acres of open water, on which wild rice could grow. The
remainder of the lake bottom was exposed or very shallow and
competing vegetation grew on these areas. The hundreds of acres of
floating cattail mats, sedges, and other competing plants on Rice
Portage will be cut up with the Reservation’s “Cookie Cutter”, and
collected and removed with the aquatic plant harvesters. Some
reclaimed areas will be seeded to enhance wild rice growth. The
restored areas are monitored, mapped, and assessed each year. So far
we have succeeded in restoring approximately 30 acres on Rice
Portage Lake. We have identified another 150 plus acres for
restoration.
Perch Lake
Perch Lake had abundant wild rice
stands for many years. About 385 acres of this 657 acre lake had
extensive wild rice stands. This lake was not as severely impacted
by the drainage ditch system as most of the other wild rice lakes. A
concrete dam was constructed on the Lake outlet in 1936, however it
was not functional by the 1960’s after decades of deterioration. For
several decades pickerel weed (Pontedaria cordata), a.k.a.: pickerel
weed or “moose-ear” colonized this wild rice lake and displaced many
acres of productive wild rice stands. Past plans to uproot this
nuisance weed with the “Cookie Cutter” and collect and remove the
plants and root materials with the aquatic plant harvesters have
been fairly successful. To date we have been able to restore wild
rice to over 200 acres where pickerel weed was the dominant
vegetation. Complete eradication of competing vegetation is
unlikely, so ongoing maintenance cutting will be necessary. Regular
monitoring, mapping, and assessments of this project are conducted.
Jaskari Lake
This 79 acre wild rice lake is
located downstream of Perch Lake, however it is also plagued by the
colonization of pickerel weed. Current plans are to remove this
problem weed with the same methods used on Perch Lake. In order to
get our restoration equipment onto the lake, a heavy duty equipment
access is needed. The construction of the access is currently being
engineered and planned. Once access is available approximately 15
acres of wild rice habitat can be restored.
Deadfish Lake
The wild rice stands on this 71 acre
lake were commonly flooded and destroyed because of the ditch
system. Deadfish Lake has a large watershed and ditching allowed the
summer rains to flow rapidly into the lake. The drainage ditches
also lowered the lake elevation, which aggravated this flooding
problem. The newly constructed impoundment upstream of Deadfish Lake
helps prevent flooding. The outlet dam allows for moderating lake
level fluctuations and controlling the release of water from the
lake.
Mud Lake
This wild rice lake is located on a
side channel of the ditch system, upstream of Rice Portage Lake. The
141 acre lake can have abundant wild rice stands, however, the
ditched outlet is an ongoing management problem. Lower water levels
have allowed competing vegetation to encroach on wild rice habitat.
Wild Rice Lake
This 54 acre wild rice lake has not
supported a viable wild rice crop for decades, due to high water
levels caused by beaver dams under Highway 210 and downstream. By
cooperating with FDL Environmental Program, FDL Wildlife, Minnesota
DNR, and Ducks Unlimited we have been able to install two “Beaver
Deceivers” or pond levelers, trap nuisance beavers, remove dams, and
reseed the lake. This is an ongoing project and it may take several
years of seeding and maintenance to produce wild rice stands that
can sustain harvest.
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