Rice Lake National Wildlife Refuge

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Parks Directory of the United States:

Rice Lake National Wildlife Refuge

Top

US Refuge, Minnesota

36289 SH 65
McGregor, MN 55760
www.fws.gov/midwest/ricelake

Phone: 218-768-2402
Location: East-central Minnesota, 5 miles south of McGregor. Established: 1935. Habitat: 18,300 acres of bog lands, shallow lakes, glacial ridges, and 4,500-acre Rice Lake. Facilities: Visitor contact station, viewing sites, auto tour route, trails, picnic areas. Activities: Boating, canoeing, fishing, hiking, cross-country skiing, snowshoeing, hunting. Access: Daily during daylight hours. Primary Wildlife: Mallard, wigeon, wood duck, Canada geese, snow geese, sandhill crane, sharp-tailed grouse, red and gray fox, river otter, northern pike, buffalo fish, yellow perch, walleye and crappie. Special Features: Local Chippewa use traditional methods to harvest a portion of the wild rice crop from Rice Lake each year.

Wikipedia on Answers.com:

Rice Lake National Wildlife Refuge

Top
Rice Lake National Wildlife Refuge
IUCN category IV (habitat/species management area)
Rice shacks on Big Rice Lake, Aitken County, Minnesota - NARA - 285209.jpg
Rice shacks on Big Rice Lake in 1937
Map showing the location of Rice Lake National Wildlife Refuge
Map of the United States
Location Aitkin County, Pine County, Minnesota, United States
Nearest city McGregor, Minnesota
Coordinates 46°31′51″N 93°20′15″W / 46.53078°N 93.33745°W / 46.53078; -93.33745Coordinates: 46°31′51″N 93°20′15″W / 46.53078°N 93.33745°W / 46.53078; -93.33745[1]
Area 18,208 acres (73.69 km2)
Established 1935
Governing body U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Official website

The 18,208-acre (73.69 km2) Rice Lake National Wildlife Refuge was established in 1935 and is located in the scenic forest and bog area of northern Minnesota. Visitors can enjoy a range of habitats, including lake, river, bog and hardwood forest.

The Refuge's history centers around the 4,500-acre (18 km2) Rice Lake which, for thousands of years, has supplied an abundant wild rice crop. Each fall, the bountiful rice attracts hundreds of thousands of waterfowl, as well as American Indians who harvest it using traditional methods. Rice Lake is known for its tremendous number of ring-necked ducks. Because of the high concentrations of migratory birds, Rice Lake Refuge has been designated as a Globally Important Bird Area by the American Birding Association.

The 2,045-acre (8.28 km2) Sandstone Unit (at 46°05′30″N 92°50′16″W / 46.09167°N 92.83778°W / 46.09167; -92.83778 in Pine County) of Rice Lake National Wildlife Refuge was acquired in 1970 through a land exchange with the United States Department of Justice. Sandstone is located in central Minnesota, in an area once known for expanses of towering white pine forests. Today, visitors enjoy a rustic and natural setting that includes a portion of the Wild and Scenic Kettle River. Birders will find plentiful neo-tropical migrants in the spring and fall. Sandstone's wildlife includes black bear, sandhill cranes, white-tailed deer and songbirds.

The one-half-acre Mille Lacs National Wildlife Refuge, located in Mille Lacs Lake, is also administered from Rice Lake Refuge.

References

 This article incorporates public domain material from websites or documents of the United States Fish and Wildlife Service.



Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

Copyrights: