In touch with the world ... at home on the High Plains

What's The Problem With Pits?

Your browser doesn’t support HTML5 audio

Dale Daniel

A functioning playa provides water to recharge the aquifer. There's also a whole community of wetland plants and invertebrates that need the very shallow water found in a healthy playa. These plants and invertebrates provide food for migrating birds. But when a playa has a pit, it is like "pulling the drain in a bathtub" and it no longer holds water very well. Rehabilitating playas by filling pits restores natural function to those wetlands.

Participants:

Angela Safranek
Rangeland Mgmt Spec
U.S. Forest Service
Pueblo, CO

Dr. Ken Rainwater
Prof. Civil & Environmental Engineering
Texas Tech University
Lubbock, TX

Grady Grissom
partner-Rancho Largo Cattle Co.
Fowler, CO

Dr. Anne Bartuszevige
Conservation Science Dir.
Playa Lakes Joint Venture
Lafayette, CO

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Email
  1. An Effort Is Underway To Restore Playa Lakes On The High Plains
  2. Landowner Restores Playa in New Mexico
  3. What's The Problem With Pits?
  4. Filling Pits in Playas on National Grasslands
  5. Playa Renovation: Haynes Farm, Holyoke, CO