Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Hot Spring County is located in Southwest Arkansas, a region composed of the Ouachita Mountains, deep valleys, and the Arkansas Timberlands. Hot Spring County is mostly within the mountainous segment of the region, mostly covered in hardwood and pine forests. One of the six primary geographic regions of Arkansas, the Ouachitas are a mountainous ...
Wildlife Management Areas in Arkansas. Created with a 320-acre public fishing lake. [2] Called the "George H. Dunklin Jr. Bayou Meto WMA" and also called "Wabbaseka Scatters" or just the "Scatters". [3] Includes Devil's Eyebrow Natural Area. [4] Kenny Vernon Nature Trail and Bell Slough Water Trail. [5]
Highland Wildlife Management Area is a 14,283-acre (22.3 sq mi; 57.8 km 2) Wildlife Management Area in Highland County, Virginia. It consists of three separate tracts of land, centered on Jack Mountain, Bullpasture Mountain, and Little Doe Hill; elevations in the area range from 1,800 to 4,390 feet (550 to 1,340 m) above sea level. [2]
A wildlife management area (WMA) is a protected area set aside for the conservation of wildlife and for recreational activities involving wildlife. New Zealand [ edit ] There are 11 wildlife management areas in New Zealand: [1]
Clinch Mountain Wildlife Management Area. / 36.936°N 81.8278°W / 36.936; -81.8278. Clinch Mountain Wildlife Management Area is a 25,477-acre (103.10 km 2) Wildlife Management Area (WMA) in Virginia. It is the second-largest WMA in the Commonwealth, covering portions of Smyth, Washington, Russell, and Tazewell counties.
The White Rock Wildlife Management Area (WMA) was designated in 1976 as 280,000 acres (110,000 ha) of protected area within the boundaries of the Ozark National Forest.The WMA is owned by the U. S. Forest Service and managed under the provisions of a Memorandum of Understanding by the Arkansas Game and Fish Commission, and is situated in the Boston Mountains of Northwest Arkansas.
The result of the Red Desert's unique ecology is that wildlife is varied. Predators such as coyotes and the occasional mountain lion, swift fox, and kit fox are attracted by the area's mammals for feed. Pocket gophers, badgers, sage grouse, sage sparrows, and the sage thrasher are associated with the sagebrush habitat.
It is wetlands managed as part of the Sacramento National Wildlife Refuge Complex and is not open to the public. Within the 18,000-acre (73 km 2) Wildlife Management Area (WMA), conservation easements have been purchased on 10,311 acres (41.73 km 2), requiring landowners to maintain wetlands on their property in perpetuity. These lands are ...