Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
San Luis also contains the most extensive network of pristine native grasslands, shrubs, and vernal pools that still remain within the Central Valley. Thousands upon thousands of mallard , pintail , green-winged teal , and ring-necked ducks flock into the managed wetlands; while the wood duck lives throughout the tree-lined slough channels.
The San Joaquin River National Wildlife Refuge is located in Stanislaus County and San Joaquin County. It encompasses over 7,000 acres (28 km 2 ) of riparian woodlands, wetlands and grasslands that host a diversity of wildlife native to California's Central Valley.
Farallon National Wildlife Refuge: Farallon Islands, near San Francisco: CA 1969: 41.9 acres (0.170 km 2) [38] Grasslands Wildlife Management Area: Merced County: CA 1979: 70,000 acres (280 km 2) [39] Guadalupe-Nipomo Dunes National Wildlife Refuge: Santa Barbara/San Luis Obispo Counties CA 2000: 2,553 acres (10.33 km 2) [40] Hopper Mountain ...
The refuge is 26,609 acres (107.68 km 2) and includes a variety of wetland and riparian habitat which supports a large variety of waterfowl, mammals and other wildlife across four units, the Kesterson Reservoir, Freitas, Bear Creek and original San Luis Units. The San Joaquin Valley, considered by historian Kevin Starr as "the most productive ...
Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge: Colorado: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service: Yes Rocky Prairie: Washington: Saeger Woods Conservation Area: Missouri: Missouri Department of Conservation: Salt Plains National Wildlife Refuge: Oklahoma: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service: San Bernardino National Wildlife Refuge: Arizona: U.S. Fish and ...
More than 1 million ducks and geese will spend the winter throughout Merced County wildlife refuges, state and public lands. Merced County wildlife refuges become winter haven for ducks, geese ...
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
The first European explorer to see tule elk was likely Sir Francis Drake who landed in July 1579 probably in today's Drake's Bay, Marin County, California: "The inland we found to be far different from the shoare, a goodly country and fruitful soil, stored with many blessings fit for the use of man: infinite was the company of very large and fat deer, which there we saw by thousands as we ...