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Desert National Wildlife Refuge

Large protected area in Nevada, United States

Desert National Wildlife Refuge

Large protected area in Nevada, United States

FieldValue
nameDesert National Wildlife Refuge
iucn_categoryIV
mapUSA
relief1
map_captionMap of the United States
map_width300
photoDesert Environment in the Desert National Wildlife Refuge.jpg
photo_captionDesert environment in the Desert National Wildlife Refuge
locationClark County, Lincoln County, Nevada, United States
nearest_cityLas Vegas, Nevada
coordinates
area_acre1,615,000
established1936
governing_bodyU.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
websiteDesert National Wildlife Refuge

The Desert National Wildlife Refuge is a protected wildlife refuge, administered by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, located north of Las Vegas, Nevada, in northwestern Clark and southwestern Lincoln counties, with much of its land area lying within the southeastern section of the Nevada Test and Training Range. The Desert NWR, created on May 20, 1936, is the largest wildlife refuge in the lower 48 states of the United States, encompassing 1.615 e6acre of the Mojave Desert in the southern part of Nevada. The refuge was originally established at 2.25 million acres. In 1940 840,000 acres were transferred to the Department of Defense.

This Range is part of the larger Desert National Wildlife Refuge Complex, which includes the Ash Meadows National Wildlife Refuge, the Moapa Valley National Wildlife Refuge, and the Pahranagat National Wildlife Refuge. All of these refuges are managed from a central office, have similar ecology, and similar management needs. Fish and Wildlife Service staff are shared between all of these refuges.

Map showing the Desert National Wildlife Reserve and other federal properties in southern Nevada

Description

Corn Creek Springs at Desert National Wildlife Refuge

Range/Refuge staff work out of the Corn Creek Field Station, which includes a visitor center, which is located 23 mi north of Las Vegas, Nevada. The Range can be accessed from U.S. Route 95 via Corn Creek Road.

The Desert NWR contains six major mountain ranges, including the Sheep Range, with heights up to 10,000 ft and valleys around 2,500 ft. Annual rainfall in the range varies from less than 4 in in the valleys to over 15 in on the mountain peaks.

Perpetuating the desert bighorn sheep and its habitat is the most important objective of the range. The Range actively improves bighorn habitats by developing new water sources and maintaining and improving existing ones. Numerous other wildlife species share the range with bighorns.

In addition to wildlife the Range also boasts an abundance of plant communities. Plant communities and wildlife found on the Range vary with altitude and climate. Most of these plant species can be seen while driving the Mormon Well Road (which can be accessed from the Corn Creek Field Station). The desert shrub community, composed of creosote bush and white bursage are the dominant shrubs in the hottest, lowest elevations of Desert National Wildlife Range. Above the valley floor, Mojave yucca and cactus become abundant. At the upper edge of the desert shrub communities, between approximately 4,200 to, black-brush and Joshua tree are dominant. Above 6,000 ft desert woodlands, composed of single-leaf pinyon, Utah juniper, and big sagebrush begin. The coniferous forest communities begin around 7,000 ft. From 7,000 to Ponderosa pine and white fir are the dominant trees. Near 10,000 ft where the growing seasons are the shortest, the only trees surviving are bristlecone pines.

Numerous recreational opportunities are available on the Range. Camping, hiking, backpacking, and horseback riding are all popular activities enjoyed by refuge visitors. Limited hunting for bighorn sheep is permitted.

Climate

|Jan record high F = 83 |Feb record high F = 87 |Mar record high F = 96 |Apr record high F = 98 |May record high F = 108 |Jun record high F = 113 |Jul record high F = 117 |Aug record high F = 114 |Sep record high F = 109 |Oct record high F = 100 |Nov record high F = 94 |Dec record high F = 81 |year record high F=

|Jan avg record high F = 68.9 |Feb avg record high F = 72.2 |Mar avg record high F = 81.7 |Apr avg record high F = 90.9 |May avg record high F = 99.0 |Jun avg record high F = 107.0 |Jul avg record high F = 110.8 |Aug avg record high F = 108.2 |Sep avg record high F = 102.4 |Oct avg record high F = 92.9 |Nov avg record high F = 79.9 |Dec avg record high F = 68.1 |year avg record high F = 111.4

|Jan avg record low F = 20.9 |Feb avg record low F = 24.0 |Mar avg record low F = 29.3 |Apr avg record low F = 34.8 |May avg record low F = 42.3 |Jun avg record low F = 50.7 |Jul avg record low F = 58.5 |Aug avg record low F = 57.2 |Sep avg record low F = 48.1 |Oct avg record low F = 35.8 |Nov avg record low F = 25.4 |Dec avg record low F = 20.5 |year avg record low F = 18.0

|Jan record low F = 0 |Feb record low F = 10 |Mar record low F = 17 |Apr record low F = 23 |May record low F = 30 |Jun record low F = 36 |Jul record low F = 43 |Aug record low F = 43 |Sep record low F = 38 |Oct record low F = 19 |Nov record low F = 16 |Dec record low F = 3 |year record low F=

References

References

  1. Green, Jason C.. (2007-11-16). "Groups criticize energy corridors". [[Stephens Media]].
  2. [http://www.fws.gov/refuges/land/LandReport.html USFWS Annual Lands Report, 30 September 2007]
  3. (September 9, 2013). "About the Complex". U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.
  4. (2019-12-26). "National wildlife refuges in Nevada face staffing shortages". [[Associated Press]].
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