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Protected areas of New Jersey by county (21 C) A. Arboreta in New Jersey (19 P) B. ... New Jersey Meadowlands District (1 C, 36 P) P. Parks in New Jersey (10 C, 7 P)
PNAs sometimes overlap provincial game refuges and wildlife management areas. With the proclamation of the Protected Natural Areas Act in 2003, 30 existing conservation and ecological areas were converted to PNAs, 20 Class I and 10 Class II. In 2008 most Class I PNAs were downgraded and more than thirty new reserves were added, with two ...
As of the 2022–23 school year, the district, comprising 12 schools, had an enrollment of 9,690 students and 777.4 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student–teacher ratio of 12.5:1. [1] The district is classified by the New Jersey Department of Education as being in District Factor Group "A", the lowest of
Protected areas of Union County, New Jersey (1 C, 7 P) W. Protected areas of Warren County, New Jersey (1 C, 5 P) This page was last edited on 29 November 2020, at 00
The U.S. Census Bureau lists "Joint Base McGuire-Dix-Lakehurst" in Burlington County as having its own school district. [6] Students attend area school district public schools, as the Department of Defense Education Activity (DoDEA) does not operate any schools on that base.
New Jersey's state park system includes properties as small as the 32-acre (0.13 km 2) Barnegat Lighthouse State Park and as large as the 115,000-acre (470 km 2) Wharton State Forest. The state park system comprises 430,928 acres (1,743.90 km 2)—roughly 7.7% of New Jersey's land area—and serves over 17.8 million annual visitors.
The state of New Jersey in the United States owns and administers over 354,000 acres (1,430 km 2) of land designated as "Wildlife Management Areas" (abbreviated as "WMA") throughout the state. These areas are managed by the New Jersey Division of Fish and Wildlife , an agency in the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection . [ 1 ]
The entire area is fenced off. As of February 1973, Pigeon Swamp was a 2,600 acres (11 km 2) unprotected wetland. In 1974, efforts began to turn it into a state park. The park comprises a large number of land plots, owned by the state of New Jersey and managed by its Department of Environmental Protection, Division of Parks and Forestry. [6]