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Bear River Migratory Bird Refuge is a 74,000-acre (299 km 2) National Wildlife Refuge in Utah, established in 1928. [1] The refuge is part of a national system of fee ownership lands purchased from willing sellers, mostly private property owners.
USFWS: Bear River Migratory Bird Refuge; Bear River: A National Wildlife Refuge by V.T. Wilson and Rachel Carson (1950) (online pdf) Bear River Commission; Bear River Flow Information; Bear River Watershed Information System: Utah State University; Bear River Watershed Information System Map Server: Utah State University
Sacramento River National Wildlife Refuge: Butte/Glenn/Tehama Counties 1989: 10,146 acres (41.06 km 2) [51] Salinas River National Wildlife Refuge: Monterey County: 1974 316 acres (1.28 km 2) [52] San Diego Bay National Wildlife Refuge: San Diego County: 1999 2,620 acres (10.6 km 2) [53] San Diego National Wildlife Refuge: San Diego County -
The remoteness also forces the pelicans to travel 30 miles (48 km) or more to find fresh water and food. The pelicans typically fly east to the Bear River Migratory Bird Refuge, where the Bear River flows into the Great Salt Lake. In the bird refuge, the water's salinity is low enough that fish can live there. (The Great Salt Lake contains no ...
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.
Multiple bear sightings were reported as the bear continued moving west, including to Carrier Mills in Saline County on July 11, the Marion area in Williamson County on July 18-19, and in the ...
A bill in the Legislature aims to discourage black bears from feeding at bird feeders. Here's how to do it in your backyard. Here's how to bear-proof your bird feeder and meet NJ's proposed standards
It consists of Bear Valley, Klamath Marsh and Upper Klamath National Wildlife Refuge (NWR) in southern Oregon and Lower Klamath, Tule Lake, and Clear Lake NWR in northern California. Lower Klamath NWR, established in 1908, was the first waterfowl refuge in the United States.