Ash Meadows National Wildlife Refuge

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Parks Directory of the United States:

Ash Meadows National Wildlife Refuge

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US Refuge, Nevada

HCR 70 Box 610-Z
Amargosa Valley, NV 89020
www.fws.gov/desertcomplex/ashmeadows

Phone: 775-372-5435; Fax: 775-372-5436
Location: 90 miles northwest of Las Vegas. Established: 1984. Habitat: Desert oasis, featuring 23,000 acres of alkaline Mohave desert interspersed with several free-flowing natural springs, outflow channels, and associated wetland habitat. Facilities: Visitor contact station, viewing sites, boardwalk, picnic areas. Activities: Swimming, wildlife watching, hunting, educational programs. Access: Open during daylight hours. Primary Wildlife: Endangered Ash Meadows Amargosa pupfish, Warm Springs pupfish, Devil's Hole pupfish, and Ash Meadows speckled dace; blacktail jackrabbit, chuckwalla lizards. Special Features: Set aside primarily for the protection and recovery of endangered fishes and plants, the refuge provides habitat for 24 species of plants and animals found nowhere else on earth.

Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Ash Meadows National Wildlife Refuge

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IUCN Category IV (Habitat/Species Management Area)
Ash Meadows 3.jpg
Looking west across Ash Meadows; the Funeral Mountains are on the horizon, Death Valley on the other side of them.
Map showing the location of
Map showing the location of
Map of the United States
Location Nye County, Nevada, United States
Nearest city Pahrump, Nevada
Coordinates 36°25′30″N 116°20′00″W / 36.425°N 116.3333333°W / 36.425; -116.3333333Coordinates: 36°25′30″N 116°20′00″W / 36.425°N 116.3333333°W / 36.425; -116.3333333
Area 23,000 acres (9,300 ha)
Established 1984
Governing body U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Official website

The Ash Meadows National Wildlife Refuge is a protected wildlife refuge, administered by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, located 90 mi (140 km) west-northwest of Las Vegas, Nevada in southern Nye County. This 23,000-acre (9,300 ha) refuge is part of the larger Desert National Wildlife Refuge Complex, which also includes the Desert National Wildlife Refuge, the Moapa Valley National Wildlife Refuge, the Pahranagat National Wildlife Refuge, and the Amargosa Pupfish Station.

The refuge was established to provide habitat for at least 26 indigenous plants and animals found nowhere else in the world.[1][2] Four fish and one plant are currently listed as endangered. This concentration of indigenous life distinguishes Ash Meadows as having a greater concentration of endemic life than any other local area in the United States and the second greatest in all of North America.

Ash Meadows provides a valuable and unprecedented example of desert oases that are now extremely uncommon in the southwest United States. The refuge is a major discharge point for a vast underground water system stretching more than 100 mi (160 km) to the northeast. Water-bearing strata come to the surface in more than 30 seeps and springs, providing a rich, complex variety of habitats. North and west are the remnants of Carson Slough, which was drained and mined for its peat in the 1960s. Sand dunes appear in the western and southern parts of the refuge. Numerous stream channels and wetlands are scattered throughout the refuge. Virtually all of the water at Ash Meadows is fossil water, believed to have entered the ground water system thousands of years ago.[citation needed]

Crystal Spring, one of many like it in the Meadows
Contents

History

The refuge was created on June 18, 1984 to protect an extremely rare desert oasis in the southwestern United States.

In 2010, Utah State University announced that a team from the school had discovered two new bee species in the genus Perdita at Ash Meadows.[2]

Ash Meadows milkvetch is found nowhere else in the world

Ecology

There are many endemic plants in Ash Meadows, including Ash Meadows sunray (Enceliopsis nudicaulis var. corrugata), Ash Meadows gumplant (Grindelia fraxino-pratensis), Amargosa niterwort (Nitrophila mohavensis), Ash Meadows milkvetch (Astragalus phoenix) and spring-loving centaury (Zeltnera namophila).

Notes

References

External links


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