Hobe Sound National Wildlife Refuge | |
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IUCN category V (protected landscape/seascape)
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the refuge at dawn
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Location | Martin County, Florida, United States |
Nearest city | Jupiter Island, Florida |
Coordinates | 27°2′26″N 80°6′49″W / 27.04056°N 80.11361°WCoordinates: 27°2′26″N 80°6′49″W / 27.04056°N 80.11361°W |
Area | 1,035 acres (419 ha) |
Established | 1969 |
Governing body | US Fish & Wildlife Service |
Website | Hobe Sound National Wildlife Refuge |
The Hobe Sound National Wildlife Refuge, a part of the United States National Wildlife Refuge System, is located on Jupiter Island in Florida. Part of the refuge is inside the town of Jupiter Island, while the rest is in the unincorporated areas of Martin County. The 1,035-acre (4.19 km2) refuge was established in 1969, to protect the loggerhead and green sea turtles. It is administered as part of the Arthur R. Marshall Loxahatchee National Wildlife Refuge.
Within the refuge is the 173-acre (0.70 km2) Reed Wilderness Seashore Sanctuary, designated a National Natural Landmark on November 1967.
According to the Florida Department of Environmental Protection, a significant amount of coastal erosion in Florida is directly attributable to the construction and maintenance of navigation inlets.
In July 2013, approximately 200,000 cubic yards of beach quality material was dredged from the St. Lucie Inlet Federal channel and impoundment basin and placed on the downdrift beaches of Jupiter Island in the vicinity of the Hobe Sound National Wildlife Refuge, with funding provided to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers from the U.S. Congress.
According to U.S. Fish and Wildlife: Hobe Sound National Wildlife Refuge was established September 30, 1969. It is a coastal refuge bisected by the Indian River Lagoon into two separate tracts of land totaling over 1000 acres. The 735 acre Jupiter Island tract provides some of the most productive sea turtle nesting habitat in the United States, and the 300 acre sand pine scrub mainland tract is valued because more than 90 percent of this community type has been lost to development in Florida. Sand pine scrub habitat is restricted only to Florida and an adjacent county in Alabama.