*** Welcome to piglix ***

Savannah National Wildlife Refuge

Savannah National Wildlife Refuge
IUCN category IV (habitat/species management area)
Map showing the location of Savannah National Wildlife Refuge
Map showing the location of Savannah National Wildlife Refuge
Location Georgia and South Carolina, United States
Nearest city Savannah, Georgia
Coordinates 32°11′50.6580″N 81°7′13.0800″W / 32.197405000°N 81.120300000°W / 32.197405000; -81.120300000Coordinates: 32°11′50.6580″N 81°7′13.0800″W / 32.197405000°N 81.120300000°W / 32.197405000; -81.120300000
Area 29,175 acres (118.07 km2)
Established 1927
Visitors 130,000 (in 2004)
Governing body U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Website Savannah National Wildlife Refuge

The Savannah National Wildlife Refuge is a 29,175 acre (118 km²) National Wildlife Refuge located in Chatham and Effingham counties in Georgia and Jasper County in South Carolina. Of the total area, 14,163 acres (57 km2) is in Georgia and 15,011 acres (61 km2) is in South Carolina. The refuge was established to provide a nature and forest preserve for aesthetic and conservation purposes.

The refuge is one of seven refuges administered by the Savannah Coastal Refuges Complex in Savannah, Georgia. The complex has a combined staff of 31 with a fiscal year 2005 budget of $3,582,000.

The first European visitors to the Savannah, Georgia area arrived in 1526. James Oglethorpe established the city of Savannah in 1733. By the mid-eighteenth century, rice planters were farming much of the land that is now part of the refuge. The old rice levees, which were built by hand, form the basis for current impoundment dikes. Remnants of the original rice field trunk water control structures and narrow dikes are still visible in some places. Within the impoundment system there are 36 historic and prehistoric archeological sites which have been located and inventoried.

On April 6, 1927, Executive Order No. 4626 established the Savannah River Bird Refuge and set aside 2,352 acres (10 km2) as a preserve and breeding ground for native birds. On November 12, 1931, Executive Order No. 5748 added 207 acres (0.8 km2) to the refuge and renamed the area the Savannah River Wildlife Refuge. An additional 6,527 acres (26 km2) were assigned to the refuge on June 17, 1936, by Executive Order No. 7391. On July 25, 1940, Presidential renamed the refuge the Savannah National Wildlife Refuge.

These three Executive Orders established the 9,086-acre (37 km2) core of the present refuge; subsequent acquisition using Federal Duck Stamp funds and other special funding added 3,557 acres (14 km2). An additional 459 acres (1.9 km2) were added when the fee title to Hog Marsh Island and adjacent lands to the north were acquired through an exchange of spoilage rights with Chatham County, Georgia. In 1964, Savannah Electric and Power Company deeded 34 acres (140,000 m2) to the refuge in exchange for a power line right-of-way. In 1978, the 12,472-acre (50 km2) Argent Swamp tract was purchased from Union Camp Corporation using Land and Water Conservation Funds. Bear Island (687 acres) was purchased in fee title, from a private individual, on October 19, 1993. In order to straighten our east boundary, two tracts totaling 54 acres (220,000 m2) were purchased from Union Camp Corporation on August 27, 1996. The Barrows tract (535 acres), which lies adjacent to our southeast boundary, was purchased in fee title during 1998. Another tract of land was added onto the mid-western portion of the refuge; the Solomon tract was purchased in 1999 and is 887 acres (3.6 km2). The total current refuge area is 29,174 acres (118 km2).


...
Wikipedia

...