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The Anahuac National Wildlife Refuge (NWR) is a wildlife conservation area along the coast of Texas (USA), west of the town of High Island, Texas. It borders East Bay, part of the Galveston Bay complex, behind Bolivar Peninsula at the Gulf of Mexico. Established in 1963, this wildlife refuge is located on the upper Texas Coast in Chambers ...
From fall through spring, Anahuac National Wildlife Refuge near Galveston offers ample opportunity to find more than two dozen species of ducks and tens of thousands of snow geese. Migrating ...
Reelfoot National Wildlife Refuge (Part of the West Tennessee National Wildlife Refuge Complex) Lake County Obion County Fulton County, Kentucky: TN 1941 10,428 acres (42.20 km 2) [487] Tennessee National Wildlife Refuge: Benton County Decatur County Henry County Humphreys County: TN 1945 51,359 acres (207.84 km 2) [488] Anahuac National ...
Snow geese over the wetlands of Anahuac National Wildlife Refuge. The region covered by the trail network is part of the Gulf Coastal Plains. With annual rainfall averages ranging from about 20 to 58 inches (510 to 1,470 mm), this is a nearly level, drained plain dissected by streams and rivers flowing into estuaries and marshes.
The category for national wildlife refuges in Texas relates to wildlife areas in the U.S. state of Texas. ... Anahuac National Wildlife Refuge;
The Anahuac National Wildlife Refuge was established 16 miles (26 km) southeast of the city in 1963 by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service. In 1989, the local chamber of commerce organized the first Gatorfest, which attracted 14,000 people into the Fort Anahuac Park, and it has been held annually since then.
The WMA is located around 5 miles south of Brazoria, 7 miles southeast of Sweeny and northwest of San Bernard National Wildlife Refuge and Justin Hurst Wildlife Management Area. Nature Center Smith County in Tyler: 82 acres Previously a bird hatchery and has a pond stocked with rainbow trout. [44] Area 3 North Toledo Bend
Two newly created national wildlife refuges in Tennessee and Wyoming will help protect habitats for threatened and endangered species such as toads, bats, shrimp and salamanders, federal officials ...