Environmental
North Dakota's natural prairie grasslands have real estate significance because:
AThey have no real estate implications
BConversion of native prairie may require wetland permits and can affect federal crop insurance, conservation easements, and wildlife habitat considerations✓ Correct
CAll prairie land is in public ownership
DPrairie preservation only affects state parks
Explanation
Native prairie conversion affects multiple regulatory and financial aspects: wetland permitting if wet areas are involved, federal crop insurance eligibility (swampbuster, sodbuster provisions), value of conservation easements, and habitat corridor considerations. Buyers of prairie land should understand these implications.
Related North Dakota Environmental Questions
- A North Dakota property's drinking water well shows elevated nitrate levels. A primary source of nitrate contamination in rural North Dakota groundwater is:
- In North Dakota's oil country, 'produced water' from Bakken wells is regulated because:
- Which document does a buyer typically commission before purchasing a potentially contaminated North Dakota commercial property?
- North Dakota's Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) pays farmers to:
- A Phase I environmental site assessment (ESA) involves:
- North Dakota's oil and gas boom in the Bakken region has increased what type of infrastructure near residential areas, raising real estate concerns?
- North Dakota's regulation of confined animal feeding operations (CAFOs) near real property is important because CAFOs can:
- North Dakota requires sellers to disclose known underground storage tanks (USTs) because:
Practice More North Dakota Real Estate Questions
1,500+ questions covering all exam topics. Start free — no signup required.
Take the Free North Dakota Quiz →