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DeSoto National Wildlife Refuge

Desoto National Wildlife Refuge
IUCN category IV (habitat/species management area)
Map showing the location of Desoto National Wildlife Refuge
Map showing the location of Desoto National Wildlife Refuge
Location Harrison and Pottawattamie counties, Iowa and Washington County, Nebraska, United States
Nearest city Blair, NE
Coordinates 41°31′25.2″N 96°1′4.6″W / 41.523667°N 96.017944°W / 41.523667; -96.017944Coordinates: 41°31′25.2″N 96°1′4.6″W / 41.523667°N 96.017944°W / 41.523667; -96.017944
Area 8,362 acres (33.83 km2)
Established March 12, 1958
Governing body U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Website DeSoto National Wildlife Refuge

DeSoto National Wildlife Refuge, created in 1958, is located along the banks of the Missouri River in the U.S. states of Iowa and Nebraska. The 8,362-acre (33.83 km2) refuge (46% in Iowa, 54% in Nebraska) preserves an area that would have been otherwise lost to cultivation. In 1960, an Army Corps of Engineers channelization project on the Missouri River moved the main river channel in the area to the west. The former river channel became DeSoto Lake, a seven-mile long oxbow lake. As a result, part of the Nebraska portion of the refuge lies on the east side of the Missouri River.

For over 20 years after construction, the lake was used for recreational boating, with half of the lake designated for watersports and the other half a no-wake zone for wildlife habitat and fishing. The lake was so popular that access was limited by the park's rangers to keep the boat traffic down on the lake on Saturday and Sunday afternoons. The lake's marina, snack bar, swimming area and boat ramps were all removed, and restrictions were placed on boat operation.

Today, the refuge is home to around 30 mammal species, including white-tailed deer, beavers, opossums, raccoons, fox squirrels, muskrats and coyotes. Many bird species also inhabit the refuge, such as bald eagles, great blue herons, egrets, pelicans, turkeys and cardinals. The refuge is also a major stopover on the Central Flyway bird migration route; the population of migratory birds increases substantially in the spring and fall months. The numbers of snow geese used to frequently be in the hundreds of thousands, but for unknown reasons has substantially dropped for only a few thousand a year (not at once). The population of Canada geese that stopped at the lake before it was channelized is once again rising.


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