Fox River National Wildlife Refuge Explained

Fox River National Wildlife Refuge
Iucn Category:IV
Map:USA
Relief:1
Map Width:300
Location:Buffalo, Marquette County, Wisconsin, United States
Nearest City:Endeavor, Wisconsin
Coordinates:43.6882°N -89.4092°W
Area:1054acres
Established:1979
Governing Body:U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Website:https://www.fws.gov/refuge/fox_river/ Fox River National Wildlife Refuge]

Fox River National Wildlife Refuge, managed by staff at Horicon National Wildlife Refuge, encompasses 1054acres of wetland and upland habitat along the Fox River in the Town of Buffalo, in Marquette County, Wisconsin.

Refuge staff restores, enhances, and preserves the oak savanna upland and sedge meadow wetland habitats historically found in extensive areas along the Fox River. Staff manage the wildlife populations that use these habitats, with special emphasis on those species dependent upon large expanses of natural marsh, such as the greater sandhill crane.

Other management objectives include protecting the habitats of any Federal or State endangered or threatened species within the refuge, such as the state threatened Blanding's turtle, and to make the refuge available for outdoor recreation, environmental education, and other public-use activities compatible with the above objectives.

References