![]() |
|
|
|||||
|
|
|
Alamosa
and Monte Vista National Wildlife Refuge
Complex Size: 11,169 acres (Alamosa NWR) 15,831 acres (Monte Vista NWR) Elevation: 7500 feet Habitats: Primary – wetlands, semidesert shrubland Secondary – rural/agricultural, open water, high elevation riparian Ownership: Federal (U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service) Land Use: Primary – nature and wildlife conservation, agriculture/livestock, hunting Secondary – recreation/tourism, research IBA Criteria: 1, 4 (waterfowl, heronries, shorebirds, gulls/terns, raptors, landbirds), 5 Site description Location: Located in the San Luis Valley in south-central Colorado, Alamosa National Wildlife Refuge is east of the town of Alamosa in Alamosa County, while Monte Vista National Wildlife Refuge is west of the town of Alamosa in Rio Grande County. Vegetative/natural features: Alamosa NWR consists of wet meadows, river oxbows, and riparian corridors within the floodplain of the Rio Grande River, and dry uplands containing greasewood and saltbrush. The site also contains a cottonwood riparian area, willows, and cattail and bullrush wetlands. Wetland habitats in Monte Vista NWR include shallow wet meadows, open water, bullrush and cattail meadows. The site also contains isolated patches of cottonwoods, high desert shrubland (greasewood and rabbitbrush communities), and farmland that produces grain for cranes and other wildlife. Ornithological Importance Concentrations of waterfowl at the refuge complex exceed 20,000 annually. The complex provides important habitat for migrating and breeding waterfowl and shorebirds, and serves as an important migration corridor along the Rio Grande for migrating passerines. Species that use the refuges include Black-necked Stilt, Sora and Virginia Rail, American Bittern, Peregrine Falcon, American White Pelican, American Avocet, and Wilson’s Phalarope. Alamosa NWR may host Southwestern Willow Flycatchers. The Migratory Bird Conservation Commission established the Monte Vista National Wildlife Refuge in 1953 to provide habitat for wildlife, particularly waterfowl, in the San Luis Valley. The site is a major stopover for migrating Greater Sandhill Cranes moving between their wintering area around Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico and breeding grounds in the northern U.S. and southern Canada. Two remaining Whooping Cranes, from a failed attempt to establish a wild migratory population, migrate with the sandhills. The site contains a number of heronries (exceeding 200 pairs) that produce White-faced Ibis, Snowy and Cattle Egrets, and Black-crowned Night Heron.
Research and educational activities: Researchers have surveyed 171 miles of waterfowl nesting transects at the refuge complex two to three times a year since 1965. Monitors conduct waterfowl pair counts and brood counts every summer during the breeding season. Annual population estimates are made for nesting colonies of ibis, egrets, and night herons. San Luis Valley and refuge-wide crane counts are conducted each spring and fall at peak migration. Conservation/Management Issues Serious threats: Potential threats: Efforts to address threats: Management details: Water is intensively managed at Monte Vista to create wetland habitats ranging from shallow wet meadows to open water. Land managers utilize mowing, grazing, prescribed burning, and farming to manage habitat. The headquarters and visitor center for both Alamosa and Monte Vista National Wildlife Refuges are located at Alamosa NWR. Alamosa and Monte Vista National Wildlife Refuges are Colorado Watchable Wildlife sites. |
|
Home
| Nature
Education | Wildlife
& Habitat | Public
Policy | Bird
Info Audubon
Colorado 1966 13th Street, Suite 230 Boulder, CO 80302
303/415-0130 FAX 303/415-0125 |