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An SVG map of Arizona showing the 46 wildlife management units. The units are semi-transparent so that county boundaries can be visualized. Note that units 11, 14, 25, 26, and 38 are Indian Reservations and thus are not managed by the Bureau of Land Management or by the Arizona Game and Fish Department. Data from the Bureau of Land Management.
An SVG map of Oregon showing the 67 wildlife management units. The units are semi-transparent so that county boundaries can be visualized. ... Trask . 15. Willamette ...
The E. E. Wilson Wildlife Area (or E. E. Wilson Game Management Area) is a wildlife management area located near Corvallis, Oregon. The site was named for Eddy Elbridge Wilson, a member of the former Oregon State Game Commission for fourteen years before his death in 1961. [2] [3] Wildlife visible includes blacktail deer, pheasant, and quail. [4]
List of HMAs in Arizona Name Herd description State Type(s) Pop./AML Ref. Alamo Descendants of burros abandoned by early prospectors, miners and local rangers. Origins of North African ancestry AZ burro AML 128–160 [8] [36] Big Sandy HMA Brought by miners in the 1860s, more brought by farmers in the 1870s to breed mules. AZ burro AML 111 ...
The Sauvie Island Wildlife Area is a state game management area on Sauvie Island in the U.S. state of Oregon. It contains more than 12,000 acres (4,856 ha) [2] for mixed use including hunting, fishing, canoeing, kayaking, birdwatching and hiking. [3] Established in 1974, it is located in both Multnomah and Columbia counties. [4]
Hart Mountain National Antelope Refuge is a National Wildlife Refuge on Hart Mountain in southeastern Oregon, which protects more than 422 square miles (1,090 km 2) and more than 300 species of wildlife, including pronghorn, bighorn sheep, mule deer, sage grouse, and Great Basin redband trout.
The Denman Wildlife Area is a high-use hunting zone, especially for game birds. [7] Since 1992, the Area has hosted the Youth Game-Bird and Waterfowl Hunt. During this annual event, only children and teenagers are allowed to hunt in the area. The ODFW takes reservations and allows up to 90 hunters at a time the chance to catch stocked pheasant ...
The Trask River is in northwestern Oregon in the United States. It drains a mountainous timber-producing area of the Northern Oregon Coast Range west of Portland into Tillamook Bay and the Pacific Ocean. [3] [6] It is one of five rivers—the Tillamook, the Trask, the Wilson, the Kilchis, and the Miami—that flow into the bay. [7]