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Rowe Sanctuary: Gibbon: Buffalo: Central: website, 1,900 acres, operated by the National Audubon Society, features the Iain Nicolson Audubon Center, offers guided trips to view the world's largest concentration of sandhill cranes from observation blinds on the banks of the Platte River: Spring Creek Prairie Audubon Center: Denton: Lancaster ...
The Crane Wildlife Refuge, located in Ipswich and Essex, Massachusetts, is a 674-acre (2.73 km 2) property managed by The Trustees of Reservations. The refuge contains Long Island, Choate Island, and small areas of the Great Marsh. Located nearby are Castle Hill and Crane Beach, other properties managed by the
Rowa Wildlife Sanctuary is a wildlife sanctuary in the North Tripura district of the Indian state of Tripura. [1] It is near the urban center of Panisagar and has significant anthropogenic pressure with risk of fragmentation. [ 2 ]
In 2021, the inaugural count found 160 sandhill cranes in five northeast Ohio counties. The survey has grown in each ensuing year. Last year, volunteers observed 357 sandhill cranes in 30 counties.
Conducted in pre-selected counties known to have sandhill crane nesting habitat Wayne County topped the list. Holmes had 18; Ashland, 11.
Crane is home to a wide variety of animal species, including deer, rabbits, squirrels, foxes, coyotes, and grouse, as well as pheasants and quail, both of which are restocked annually for hunting. Less common bird species in the area include the black-billed cuckoo , common yellowthroat , Eastern towhee , field sparrow , indigo bunting ...
Audubon's Lillian Annette Rowe Sanctuary: A Refuge, a River, and a Migration. 2020. Wildlife of Nebraska: A Natural History. 2020. Cranes in Life, Lore and Literature: A Catechism for Crane-lovers, 2020. Birds of the Nebraska Sandhills. 2020. With Josef Kren.
Crane Meadows National Wildlife Refuge It is an essential stop for many species of migrating birds. Located within a large watershed that includes Rice, Skunk and Mud Lakes, Platte and Skunk Rivers , Rice and Buckman Creeks, and sedge meadow wetlands, it harbors one of the largest nesting populations of greater sandhill cranes in Minnesota.