I think one of the biggest problem for LA is that when you are at the end of the line as everything further up the line improves, no matter what you do, it doesn't matter as much. Most of the birds won't even know you exist.
The southern Illinois Canada goose Mecca holding a million Canada geese went to holding 10's of thousands (a few percent of the heydays). There was no degradation of the habitat at the end of the line, but purely dramatic improvements in quality further up the line.
From google.
While a precise, cumulative total for all Midwest wetland rehabilitations since 2000 is not explicitly aggregated in a single report, data from conservation organizations and federal agencies indicate that hundreds of thousands of acres have been restored, with specific, large-scale projects contributing heavily to this total.
The Nature Conservancy
The Nature Conservancy
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Key statistics and rehabilitation efforts in the Midwest since 2000 include:
USDA/NRCS Initiatives: Nationally, the NRCS has restored nearly 2.9 million acres of wetlands through easement programs, with the Midwest being a primary focus.
Large-Scale Projects:
Glacial Ridge Project (Minnesota): Initiated in 2000, this project involved restoring over 8,000 acres of wetlands (within a 37,000-acre project area).
Emiquon Preserve (Illinois): Initiated in 2000, this project restored 6,000+ acres of farmland into a functioning wetland ecosystem.
Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie (Illinois): The Wetlands Initiative has restored thousands of acres of wetlands at this site, with over 3,376 acres documented by 2021.
Annual Improvements: In 2025 alone, the Nature Conservancy reported approximately 2.5 million acres of lakes and wetlands with improved management in the Midwest.
Since 2000, Ducks Unlimited (DU) has conserved and restored over 1 million acres of wetlands in the Midwest, a region crucial for prairie pothole habitat. In the Great Lakes region alone, over 60,000 acres of wetlands and associated habitats were protected in the past decade. DU's efforts in the U.S. include over 600,000 acres annually.
This trend of wetlands rehabilitation and restoration is not going to reverse, but will continue.