Iowa
To Save An Endangered Prairie Fish, Dried-up Iowa Wetlands Get New Life – Inside Climate News
The minnow U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service ecologists pulled from the shallow moat was a puny thing, with a flare of orange rimming its fins and a dark band of scales running the full length of its inch-and-a-half body.
“Finally,” thought Kathy Law, as she peered at the little fish. In the summer sun, it glinted metallic.
Topeka shiners once thrived in small and medium streams across the Great Plains. But for several decades, the fish have been hard to find.
For three summers, Law, a farmer and attorney, had watched expectantly as water, native plants and then wildlife returned to five restored oxbow wetlands on her family farm in Iowa’s Carroll County.
In 2021, the Fish and Wildlife Service and the Iowa Soybean Association excavated the U-shaped ponds on the property, former river meanders cut off from the main channel of Purgatory Creek and filled in with decades of soil erosion.
The project cost tens of thousands of dollars, paid for by federal, state and private grants. It had all been for the silver minnow she now held.
The expansion of agriculture across the Midwest has blotted out many of the slow-moving, off-channel prairie streams that Topeka shiners favor. In their place, manually drained cropland and artificially straightened rivers have taken over.
In 1998, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service listed the Topeka shiner as a federally endangered species, threatened by “habitat destruction, degradation, modification, and fragmentation.”
But concerted efforts to restore habitats where the endangered minnow might once again thrive have led to the restoration of hundreds of oxbow lakes across Iowa.
A network of federal, state, non-profit, and agricultural trade agencies has teamed up to excavate the former wetlands at little-to-no cost to landowners. Nearly two decades since beginning restoration efforts, they’ve learned that the abandoned river meanders don’t just create habitats for a recovering Topeka shiner population, they also effectively wash out the agricultural pollutants that plague Iowa’s waterways.
“It really is a success story,” said Karen Wilke, associate director of freshwater at The Nature Conservancy in Iowa. “Now we’re not just doing it for Topeka shiner, but we’re doing it for water quality as well.”
Over centuries, meandering rivers and streams fold in on themselves like ribbon candy. Insistent currents erode their banks, redrawing riverbeds into ever-tighter sinusoidal waves.
Chasing the path of least resistance, the current eventually cuts off U-shaped oxbow channels, leaving curving lakes where water flows more slowly, if at all.
Oxbows are naturally occurring features in the Iowa landscape, but they became more abundant as agriculture brought drastic, manmade transformations to the state’s hydrology, explained Clay Pierce, a former scientist in the U.S. Geological Survey’s Iowa Cooperative Fish and Wildlife Research Unit at Iowa State University. He spent the last decade of his career studying Topeka shiner habitats and recovery efforts.
Before European settlement, wetlands covered approximately 11 percent of Iowa. Their still or slow-moving waters provided habitats for a variety of fish, reptiles and amphibians, including the diminutive, silvery Topeka Shiner. Today, over 95 percent of those wetlands have been drained and converted to farmable land.
“It’s like one of the wonders of the world, how they changed the Iowa landscape,” said Pierce.
Tile lines, underground drainage systems used to lower the water table in and around fields, transformed the state’s slow-moving wetlands into faster, fuller streams that intensified natural riverbank erosion and the creation of oxbow lakes, Pierce explained.
And as industrialized agriculture rerouted the state’s waters and accelerated oxbow formation, farming practices also exacerbated soil erosion, leading to the drying out of those oxbows.
Tillage, a soil management practice that reached peak popularity in the mid-20th century, left fertile topsoil exposed to the elements and readily carried off fields. Trillions of tons of U.S. topsoil are estimated to have been lost to erosion to date, settling in nearby waterways.
Erosion-mitigating farming strategies, including no-till or low-till agriculture and the planting of cover crops, have become more widely adopted, but many former oxbows in Iowa are still filled with sediment.
The former oxbows look like apostrophe-shaped scars in the earth, said Wilke, at The Nature Conservancy in Iowa. Her team has mapped out tens of thousands of oxbows across the state that are candidates for restoration.
In rainy years, these patches of land are prone to flooding, as though remembering a past life. Those on farmland are largely unusable—too concave and wet to support a decent yield.
As the slow-moving and standing waters favored by the Topeka shiner all but disappeared from Iowa, so did the fish.
Once common across Minnesota, South Dakota, Iowa, Nebraska, Missouri, and Kansas, documented populations of the fish were reduced to an estimated 20 percent of their original geographic range by the turn of the 21st century, said Pierce.
Before the onset of industrial agriculture, shiners were found in streams that flowed out of large, slow-moving wetland areas. But those wetland complexes are gone, converted to millions of acres of cropland.
Despite their endangered status, the tiny minnows are shockingly rugged, able to withstand both the broiling summers and frigid winters of the Great Plains, said Pierce. They’re also better equipped to survive in the low-oxygen conditions of shallow waters where few other fish can thrive. That resilience bodes well for their survival in restored wetland habitats.
“We can’t replace all the large, expansive wetland complexes that were here. It wouldn’t be economically or even politically possible to do that. But we can build more oxbows or encourage the ones that are there to function as habitats,” said Pierce.
Following the Topeka shiner’s federal endangerment listing, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) focused its efforts on preserving remnant populations in the North Raccoon River watershed, which runs through intensely cultivated cropland in western Iowa.
Though the Service initially attempted to engineer habitats within creeks, diverting currents with boulders and excavating deeper pools, they more often than not found shiners in oxbow lakes set back from the main channel and occupying private property.
Oxbow lakes became, and remain, central to the Topeka shiner recovery plan.
In the early 2000s, USFWS worked with The Nature Conservancy of Iowa, which served as “boots on the ground,” finding funding sources, connecting with landowners, and overseeing the restorations, said Wilke. By 2008, the agencies had restored nearly twenty former oxbows in the Racoon River watershed.
The impact of restorations on local wildlife populations was immediately evident, said Wilke. Topeka shiners began returning to the landscape, but so did countless other species.
Research conducted by The Nature Conservancy documented 57 fish species and 81 bird species using the newly restored oxbow habitats. “Turtles, mussels, frogs, river otters, beavers, you name it,” said Wilke. “I think all the species are hungry to have this habitat come back, hungry to have more water on the landscape.”
In 2011, the Iowa Soybean Association came on board, joining forces to restore more oxbows in the Boone River watershed in north-central Iowa. With its connections to farmers across Iowa, the trade association for soybean producers brought new momentum to the project, said Wilkes.
Unlike other states with vast swaths of public land, over 97 percent of Iowa’s land is privately owned. This means that the majority of former oxbows are on private land where restoration hinges on buy-in from the owners. The Iowa Soybean Association held powerful sway with those property owners.
The organizations collaborating with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service make up the Iowa Topeka Shiner Recovery Partnership and provide both technical support and a diverse array of private funding, in addition to the suite of state and federal grants used to cover restoration costs.
Though each acre of wetland costs approximately $20,000 to excavate, not a single cent comes from landowners, said Wilke.
For Kathy Law, that was a huge selling point in her decision to restore the five oxbows on her family farm. “We didn’t have to spend any money on it. And they took care of everything,” she said. “I think that’s the neat part of it. It shows we can do things that don’t cost us any money, and try to make a difference.”
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To date, more than 200 oxbows have been restored in the state of Iowa. Though far from a complete comeback, Topeka shiner populations seem to be on the rise.
In 2016 and 2017, Pierce and his students at Iowa State University collected the endangered minnows in 60 percent of the Iowa watersheds they’d historically inhabited, a significant rebound from only 32 percent in 2010 and 2011.
In 2019, Pierce published an article documenting the status of Topeka shiners in Iowa.
“I think the picture is brighter, and I firmly believe that oxbows are part of that story,” said Pierce. “It’s an ‘if you build it, they will come’ sort of thing.”
Sampling by the Nature Conservancy in Iowa has also turned up Topeka shiners in the majority of restored oxbows.
In fact, the minnows may not be classified as “endangered” for much longer. In the 5-year status review for the Topeka shiner, completed by USFWS in 2021, federal wildlife officials recommended that the fish be downlisted to “threatened.”
The surge in oxbow restorations hasn’t only served the Topeka shiner, participants in the recovery partnership are quick to point out.
The restored wetlands are also powerful water-quality tools, helping remove nitrogen runoff from tile lines that drain much of Iowa’s farmland before it can pollute major waterways.
“We’re able to intercept that tile into these wetlands before that water gets into the river, and we’re finding that it removes 62 percent, on average, of the farm chemicals, the nitrate, that comes in from that tile,” said Wilke.
Based on those findings, Iowa’s Nutrient Reduction Strategy added oxbow restorations as a nutrient-reducing practice in 2019. Introduced in 2014 to address the high volume of agricultural nutrients exiting Iowa’s waterways, the strategy promotes voluntary conservation measures for farmers looking to minimize nutrient loss from their fields and allocates state funds to those practices.
The Iowa Department of Agriculture and Land Stewardship now covers 100 percent of the costs of oxbow restorations that will receive water from a tile line.
Unlike other nutrient-reduction practices the state funds, such as saturated buffers and bio-reactors, oxbows are both natural and long-lasting, said Wilke. “You do it, and it’s done. And then you just let nature take over and do its thing.”
The water quality benefits of oxbow restorations have brought a new group of landowners on board, said Grace Yi, habitat systems manager at Practical Farmers of Iowa, the most recent member of the Iowa Topeka Shiner Recovery Partnership.
“That’s what makes oxbows really great. They have a lot of different benefits and angles that you can approach farmers and landowners with,” said Yi.
Some of those benefits, “you can’t really put a price tag on,” like a more beautiful property or, as one farmer told Yi, time spent catching frogs with his grandson.
For Kathy Law, oxbow restorations have returned her family’s farm to a state she remembers from her early days there.


Mallards now paddle through the still waters. Off the muddy banks, fat tadpoles whip their golf-ball-sized bodies beneath fallen leaves.
If Law encountered the Topeka shiner during childhood fishing expeditions on the farm, she doesn’t remember it. But the oxbows stir at something in her memory.
“I remember there were little creeks, little streams going through here. We hadn’t had those for forever.”
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Iowa
Iowa City police seek help identifying persons of interest in vandalism investigation
IOWA CITY, Iowa (KCRG) – Iowa City police are asking the public’s help identifying persons of interest connected to a vandalism investigation.
Police said a business was vandalized in the alley behind the 200 block of East Washington Street on Sunday at 2:35 a.m.
Investigators would like to speak with the persons of interest pictured. Police ask anyone who recognizes these individuals to contact them.
Anyone with information or security camera footage of the incident should contact the Iowa City Police Department at 319-356-5275. Iowa City Area Crime Stoppers is also offering a reward up to $1,000 for information that leads to an arrest.
Copyright 2026 KCRG. All rights reserved.
Iowa
The ‘What Ifs’ of 2025-26 for Iowa State athletics | Hines
Iowa State football coach Jimmy Rogers assesses the Cyclones’ spring
Iowa State football coach Jimmy Rogers assesses the Cyclones’ spring
Spring commencement arrives at Iowa State this weekend, with a whole new generation of Cyclones set to get their diplomas and move on to the next things in their lives.
The options and choices will set their path for, potentially, the years and decades ahead.
Which got me thinking about the choices and circumstances of this school year that came for Iowa State athletics. There were no shortages of inflection points at which, it seems, programs and an entire athletics department pivoted to new directions.
Let’s explore.
What if Iowa State had hired Taylor Mouser as head football coach?
This seems to be the most discussed “Sliding Doors” moment for Iowa State football fans regarding head coach Matt Campbell’s departure to Penn State. And with good reason. It’s the most obvious, could have had the most immediate impact on the program and would have been largely seen as a continuation of the most successful run in school history.
Would promoting the Iowa State offensive coordinator, though, have been the right move?
If you assume a best-case scenario in which some of the star Cyclone players on offense – think Rocco Becht, Ben Brahmer, Carson Hansen, etc. – stay at Iowa State and a bulk of the coaching staff does as well, there are still likely defections that weaken the roster. Nothing like we saw back in December, but, still, there would be holes – and Campbell’s shoes – to fill by a first-time head coach taking over for a legend.
The calculation, as I see it, has to be – does the Year 1 continuity and relative stability gained by hiring Mouser provide for better long-term results than hiring Jimmy Rogers, who has the benefit of head-coaching experience?
It certainly would have made the fan base feel better back in December, but would it have positioned Iowa State to have better results in 2027 and beyond?
The roster almost certainly would have been “better” in 2026 if Iowa State retained Mouser, but would that have created a more solid foundation for the future or just delayed decay?
This “What If” becomes a lot less intricate and interesting if Rogers just wins a ton this fall and going forward.
What if Penn State had been able to hire Kalani Sitake as its football coach?
I think this is the most interesting question on the list.
By reports, Penn State was on the verge of hiring Sitake from BYU when the Cougars’ boosters – led by the Crumbl Cookie fortune – banded together to put together a financial package to keep Sitake in Provo.
What if they hadn’t, though?
Sitake goes to Penn State, and Dec. 5, 2025, is an uneventful day in Iowa State history rather than one of its most feverish.
But … what happens a few weeks later when Sherrone Moore is fired at Michigan?
Rather than plucking 66-year-old Kyle Whittingham from Utah/forced retirement, do the Wolverines try to make a Michigan Man out of an Ohioan? Does Campbell inherit the seat of Bo Schembechler?
And, for the sake of this thought exercise, if Campbell did move to Ann Arbor, does the timing of that decision change athletics director Jamie Pollard’s options and calculus about Iowa State’s opening? Is Jimmy Rogers still available? Or would he have taken a different opening or opted not to leave Pullman at that later date? Is Mouser the answer in this scenario?
Or is the Buckeye State distaste for the state Up North too much and Campbell returns for Year 11 at Iowa State?
Addy Brown on what went wrong in Iowa State’s loss to Syracuse
Iowa State’s Addy Brown talks about her team’s struggles in a loss to Syracuse in the NCAA Tournament.
What if Addy Brown doesn’t get hurt?
Iowa State women’s basketball was 14-0 on Jan. 4 when it played Baylor in Waco, and the season felt sure to realize the potential that was clear before it started with one of coach Bill Fennelly’s best rosters.
The Cyclones, though, returned home with their first loss and with Addy Brown sidelined with a back injury.
Four more losses in a row followed, and when Brown returned to the floor after six weeks, the Cyclones’ season was floundering.
They salvaged an NCAA Tournament bid, but a first-round exit gave way to a roster collapse with nine players – including Brown and superstar Audi Crooks – leaving via the transfer portal, putting Fennelly’s tenure and future under fire.
If Brown doesn’t get hurt – or just isn’t out as long – does that change the trajectory of the season? The offseason? And what the eventual end of Fennelly’s Iowa State career looks like?
What if Joshua Jefferson doesn’t roll his ankle?
The most recent “What If” I think is also the most straightforward.
If Jefferson’s ankle doesn’t roll in the early minutes of Iowa State’s first-round NCAA Tournament blowout win over Tennessee State, I think the Cyclones get a long second weekend in Chicago, but the Final Four drought probably remains intact.
Jefferson’s rebounding and offensive impact are, I think, enough to give the Cyclones the edge against Tennessee, but Michigan, the Cyclones’ would-be Elite Eight opponent, was just a juggernaut.
I’m not sure even a full-strength Iowa State team would have had more than a puncher’s chance. The Wolverines were just one of the best college basketball teams we’ve seen over the last few decades.
Iowa State columnist Travis Hines has covered the Cyclones for the Des Moines Register and Ames Tribune since 2012. Contact him at thines@amestrib.com or (515) 284-8000. Follow him on X at @TravisHines21.
Iowa
Top Iowa High School Football Prospect Makes His Decision
One of the top Iowa high school football prospects in the state has made his college decision official.
Iowa City Regina High School senior-to-be Tate Wallace has announced he has verbally committed to the University of Minnesota in the Big Ten Conference. Wallace picked the Golden Gophers and head coach PJ Fleck over a finalists Notre Dame, Nebraska, Arizona, Arizona State and Wisconsin.
Wallace narrowed down his list of schools to six at the end of April before making his final decision.
Iowa City Regina Football Standout Tate Wallace Ranked As No. 2 Overall Prospect In Iowa High School Football
The 6-foot-2, 226-pound linebacker is considered the No. 2 overall prospect in the state of Iowa for high school football, and is the No. 21 linebacker in the Class of 2027, according to 247Sports.
In the 247Sports Composite rankings, Wallace is No. 2 in Iowa high school football, No. 29 at linebacker and No. 359 for the Class of 2027.
Along With Minnesota, Tate Wallace Currently Holds Offers From Schools Such As Arizona, Nebraska, Wisconsin, Notre Dame, Tennessee, Iowa State
Wallace currently holds 16 total offers including from the previously mentioned Minnesota, Notre Dame, Nebraska, Arizona, Arizona State, Wisconsin, Iowa State, Kansas State, Purdue, Tennessee, West Virginia, Eastern Michigan, Miami (Ohio), Toledo, UNLV, North Dakota and North Dakota State.
As a junior, Wallace registered almost 50 tackles on defense, with 29 of them being counted as solo stops. He had 18 tackles for loss, 8.5 quarterback sacks and forced two fumbles, as Iowa City Regina advanced to the state championship game of the Iowa High School Athletic Association State Football Championships.
Future Minnesota Golden Gopher Has Been Key Two-Way Starter For Regals
Wallace also hauled in 40 passes for 611 yards with 10 receiving touchdowns on offense for the Regals. As a two-way player for Iowa City Regina during his sophomore season, Wallace had 27.5 tackles, including 16 solo stops, four tackles for loss and a quarterback sack, adding 51 receptions for 752 yards and eight touchdowns.
Back in March, Wallace announced seven spring visits to Notre Dame, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Arizona, Kansas State and Arizona State. He also visited Tennessee this past fall, taking in an SEC contest with the Volunteers.
Along with his success on the football field, Wallace helped lead the Regals to the Iowa High School Athletic Association Boys State Basketball Tournament this past winter. He earned High School on SI all-state honors in the process.
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