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Havasu National Wildlife Refuge IBA ◊

Lake Havasu2_MispahnContinental IBA for Yuma Clapper Rail

Size: 61.4 square miles, 39,281 acres

Identified: 06/2008

Visiting the IBA: The refuge office is in Needles, California. From Interstate 40, exit on J Street and go southwest (uphill) 0.6 miles. Turn right at the headquarters entrance sign and follow the signs. The office is in the back. Office hours are 8am-4pm Monday through Friday. Best time to visit is from late fall to early spring.

Site Description: The refuge protects 30 river miles and 300 miles of shoreline from Needles, California, to Lake Havasu City, Arizona. One of the last remaining natural stretches of the lower Colorado River flows through the 20-mile-long Topock Gorge. The 4,000-acre Topock Marsh depends on water from the Colorado River. 32 percent of the refuge is designated as wilderness.Havasu NWR - bird on map

Birds: The refuge shelters thousands of Canada and Snow geese and ducks each winter. Western and Clark’s grebes raise their young in both Topock Marsh and Topock Gorge, early spring nesting California Black Rail, Yuma Clapper Rail, and Least Bittern can be heard and maybe seen if you take a canoe or kayak trip through Topock Gorge. Herons and egrets also nest in rookeries in the marsh.

Western Grebes by Mark Watson

Western Grebes by Mark Watson

Year-round: Sonoran desert; Gambel’s Quail, Anna’s Hummingbird, Burrowing Owl, Gila Woodpecker, Black Phoebe, Ash-throated Flycatcher, Verdin, Cactus Wren, Black-tailed Gnatcatcher, Curve-billed Thrasher, Phainopepla, Abert’s Towhee.

Breeding: White-winged Dove, Costa’s Hummingbird,Bell’s Vireo, Lucy’s Warbler, Yellow Warbler, Common Yellowthroat, Yellow-breasted Chat, Summer Tanager, Abert’s Towhee, Song Sparrow, Hooded Oriole, and Bullock’s Oriole.

Conservation Issues: Salt cedar, a tree originally from Asia, aggressively takes over disturbed areas along the Colorado River and native cottonwood and willow trees cannot compete. Strategies: Havasu NWR works to control salt cedar and re-establish native riparian forests. To protect floating nest birds, jet powered personal watercraft (PWC) are not allowed in backwaters off the main Colorado River channel for the 15-mile stretch from the Island/Castle Rock location, north to the Interstate 40 bridge, buoy line.

Maps of this Important Bird Area:

Havasu National Wildlife Refuge IBA GIS Map

Havasu National Wildlife Refuge IBA GIS Map

Havasu National Wildlife Refuge IBA GIS Map - zoomed out

Havasu National Wildlife Refuge IBA GIS Map – zoomed out

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

State of the IBAs 2014 Baseline – More Technical info about the status of this Important Bird Area

National Audubon Profile Page for Havasu National Wildlife Refuge IBA

Complete eBird.org Checklist of birds Reported for Havasu National Wildlife Refuge IBA

For an interactive map and habitat and land ownership analysis of this IBA visit the National Audubon IBA Map and select “Arizona” and then the name of this Important Bird Area. To access analysis graphs, click on the map boundary of the IBA.

Location: 34° 23’N -114° 03’WLake Havasu_Chris Austin

County: Mohave

Site Status: Identified 06/2008

Ownership: Federal

Criteria: B1; Continental; Species of Conservation Concern – Yuma Clapper Rail(102 breeding pairs 2009)

D1 – Site Important to Special Status Avian Species – Federally listed Yuma Clapper Rail

D3 Rare, Unique, or Exceptional Representative Habitat/Ecological Community:  Marsh and River Slough

IBA31D4i Significant Concentrations of Birds, >1% State population (D4ii:Waterfowl, 2000+)

Site Description: When the gates closed at Parker Dam in 1941, President Franklin D. Roosevelt created Havasu NWR to provide migratory waterfowl habitat. The refuge has shifted boundaries since then, including the addition of the Needles Peaks area in 1968. Topock Marsh, Topock Gorge, and Havasu Wilderness form three distinct areas. The passage of the Arizona Desert Wilderness Act in 1990 and the California Desert Protection Act in 1994, together designated 17,606 acres, or 32 percent of the refuge, as wilderness.

 

Vegetation Description Hectares
ACACIA GREGGI ASSOCIATIONS 61.87412
CREOSOTEBUSH – BURSAGE COMMUNITIES 8667.815
DALEA SPINOSA ASSOCIATIONS 155.8731
LAKE 1432.557
LARREA DIVARICATA – FRANSERIA DUMOSA ASSOCIATIONS 513563.5
MIXED PALOVERDE – CACTI COMMUNITIES 1929900
PALOVERDE – SMOKETREE ASSOCIATIONS 2801.08
POPULUS FREMONTI – SALIX – MIXED BROADLEAF ASSOCIATIONS 104.4994
PROSOPIS JULIFLORA – SALIX ASSOCIATIONS 3636.868
PROSOPIS JULIFLORA ASSOCIATIONS 14341.37
REED COMMUNITES 547.95
TAMARIX PENTANDRA ASSOCIATIONS 47.24868
Audubon's Warbler by Franco Folini

Audubon’s Warbler by Franco Folini

Ornithological Summary: The refuge shelters thousands of Canada and snow geese and ducks each winter. Western and Clark’s grebes raise their young in both Topock Marsh and Topock Gorge. Herons and egrets nest in rookeries in the marsh. Banding operations were conducted for a total of 650.83 net hours during the winter of 2005-06.   There were 139 individual birds captured (0.21 per net hour) and 45 recaptures (0.069 per net hour) for a total of 184 birds captured. Eighteen species were captured, with 4 species accounting for 68% of all captures: ruby-crowned kinglet 37%, orange-crowned warbler 15%, Audubon’s warbler 8%, and Bewick’s wren (Thryomanes bewickii) 8%

Riparian Species: In 2005, the Havasu banding site (HAVA) was monitored during the winter season for the first time. This site is located on the Havasu National Wildlife Refuge at the southern end of Topock Marsh approximately 1.2 miles (1.5 km) north of the town of Topock, AZ. Area searches are conducted at each site during each of the 6 banding periods to account for species that may not be captured during standard mist-net operations.

Banding operations were conducted for a total of 650.83 net hours during the winter of 2005-06.   There were 139 individual birds captured (0.21 per net hour) and 45 recaptures (0.069 per net hour) for a total of 184 birds captured. Eighteen species were captured, with 4 species accounting for 68% of all captures: Ruby-crowned kinglet 37%, Orange-crowned warbler 15%, Audubon’s warbler 8%, and Bewick’s wren (Thryomanes bewickii) 8%.