One 35-degree morning in April, a group of activists鈥攂undled up but upbeat鈥攖oted large animal cutouts and posters along a roadside in Rockford, Illinois. They鈥檇 assembled to celebrate the imminent emergence of bumble bee queens.
The day鈥檚 six-legged honorees would soon awaken from hibernation in a nearby patch of habitat called Bell Bowl Prairie, which advocates have spent the better part of a year trying to save from bulldozers. 鈥淓ven though we are fighting to save it, it is still here, and we can still celebrate that it鈥檚 here,鈥 says Jillian Neece, a community organizer for the prairie with Friends of Illinois Nature Preserves.
In 2019, the Chicago-Rockford International Airport initiated a $50 million expansion project to create space for more cargo planes and add hundreds of jobs to the region. But Bell Bowl Prairie, which lies on the airport鈥檚 property, would be largely paved over and bisected by a new road. Though the airport says it notified media at the project鈥檚 start, local environmentalists didn鈥檛 know about it until last summer when a birder spotted earth movers on the prairie. By that point construction activities had already cut the 22-acre parcel down to 14 acres.
The work has been at a standstill since August, however, when Illinois Department of Natural Resources employees recorded two endangered rusty patched bumble bees at the site. The discovery brought construction to a halt that was originally set to expire last November, after the insects鈥 foraging season. Following a lawsuit that activists filed in late October, the new work date shifted to March, then to June as federal agencies looked again at how construction could affect the bee. Now the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) is set to decide by fall whether the project can continue after an agreement with the airport ends on October 15.
In the short term, this is a victory for environmentalists鈥攖he prairie will remain safe for another summer, and the movement has more time to organize. But the activists aren鈥檛 holding their breath: Neece feels it鈥檚 unlikely the FWS will halt construction, since this . Instead, the activists are brainstorming last-ditch efforts to reroute the new road and trying to boost morale. 鈥淲e can definitely feel some people burning out, especially with multiple deadlines that we鈥檝e been working against,鈥 Neece says.
To fight the fatigue, local organizers have rallied activists to , contact elected officials, outside Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker鈥檚 Chicago home, and . And as the April celebration demonstrated, they鈥檝e also gotten creative. 鈥淲e鈥檝e had people who鈥檝e done drawings and paintings and people who鈥檝e done street performance鈥攂eing bees鈥攁nd just all kinds of fun things to bring awareness to the issue,鈥 says Kerry Leigh, executive director of the Natural Land Institute (NLI).
Some activists have started conversations with sustainability representatives from UPS and Amazon, which ship cargo through Rockford airport, in hopes that the companies might release statements in support of the prairie鈥檚 protection, Neece says. One Facebook group member even calling the White House. NLI hopes to work with the Illinois Nature Preserves Commission, part of the state natural resources department, to get Bell Bowl Prairie protected status. That would require the airport鈥檚 approval, however, which doesn鈥檛 appear likely. (Airport officials declined to comment for this story.)
To make clear what鈥檚 at stake, activists recently touted new evidence that small habitats like Bell Bowl Prairie can have outsize importance for biodiversity. In , researchers analyzed 32 datasets from around the world and found that small habitats, when totaled to equal the size of one large one, hold more biodiversity and declining species. 鈥淲e just have a lot of very small patches left,鈥 says Carleton University research fellow Federico Riva, who co-authored the paper. 鈥淲e are wasting a lot of conservation opportunities by letting these small patches go without consideration.鈥
Recognizing the study鈥檚 relevance, Neece shared it with the more than 4,000 members of the . 鈥淭his is still something that鈥檚 worth our time,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e know that there are threatened and endangered species that live there and that pass through there on their migrations.鈥
While the bee is this standoff鈥檚 legal basis, the prairie is more than just a pollinator habitat. It鈥檚 home to imperiled plants, including large-flowered beardtongue and prairie false dandelion, and supports birds such as the state endangered Loggerhead Shrike and state threatened Black-billed Cuckoo, as well as Bobolinks, Bell鈥檚 Vireos, and , according to eBird. Plus, Leigh says, it鈥檚 a remnant habitat that鈥檚 been around since the last retreat of glaciers from Illinois about 10,000 years ago. NLI uses remnants as reference points to know how restored land should look. 鈥淲hen we no longer have these sites to refer back to,鈥 she says, 鈥渨e鈥檙e going to no longer know where we鈥檙e going.鈥
To reduce its impacts on this ancient habitat, the airport's latest plan includes an updated construction design that removes a stormwater detention area included in earlier plans. That change would save about 3.9 additional acres of prairie, leaving 6.2 total acres intact after construction, according to a draft that the Federal Aviation Administration submitted to the FWS in April as part of the ESA consultation process triggered by the bee sighting.
In addition, the airport proposed conservation measures such as planting a 52-acre pollinator habitat at a different site, barring pesticide use on the remaining prairie, and limiting any ground-disturbing activity to before March 15 to prevent growth of flowers that would draw bees to nest there during construction. Although the project would reduce the bee鈥檚 foraging habitat on the property by 60 percent and 鈥渋s likely to adversely affect鈥 the species, the project shouldn鈥檛 jeopardize its existence, the assessment says, as long as the airport takes those mitigating steps.
The grassroots activists aren鈥檛 convinced. And so, as summer brightens Bell Bowl Prairie, they鈥檙e bracing for a decision that might not go their way. They鈥檙e doing everything they can think of鈥攃ontacting officials, exploring legal options, staging performances as pollinators鈥攖o save this vibrant slice of nature. 鈥淲e need to kick it in gear,鈥 Neece says. Birds are singing and bees are buzzing, but October isn鈥檛 far off.