Noatak Biosphere Reserve - Nome, AK
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Home
 Alaska
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 Wildlife Viewing

Noatak Biosphere Reserve
GPS Coordinates: Unknown
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Wildlife viewingTent campingHiking is allowedFishing
Courtesy of EatStayPlay.com
Noatak Biosphere Reserve is located in northwestern Alaska in the Arctic Range. The Noatak preserve was established in order to maintain the environmental integrity of the Noatak River and adjacent uplands, to protect wildlife habitats and populations and to protect archaeological resources for scientific research.
Vegetation within the biosphere reserve is predominated by low mat tundra with boreal forest cover in the lower Noatak drainage and alpine tundra communities at higher elevations (willow, heather and combinations of grasses, sedges, wildglowers and mosses). Moist tundra community occurs along the foothills of the Noatak Valley (cottongrass, willow, dwarf birch, labrador tea, Lapland rosebay, mountain alder and avens). A spruce forest community (white spruce, paper birch, aspen, poplar and black spruce) is represented sporadically throughout the area.
Wildlife is the primary natural resource of the preserve and includes caribou, moose, Dall sheep, grizzly bear, wolf, fox, lynx, marten, beaver and muskrat. The Noatak River is considered key in the subsistence and commercial fisheries harvest for north-west Alaska. The most common fish found in the Noatak River and its tributaries are Arctic grayling (Thymallus arcticus) and Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus).
Human population of the region is predominantly Inupiat Eskimos who are living mainly in the community of Kotzebue. The economic life in the region continues to be dominated by subsistence use of resources; however commercial fisheries as well as tourism bring income to the residents. The area is considered to have been the gate for human settlement of North America. Its archaeological resources are of great scientific interest.


Facilities: With the remoteness and no facilities within the park each visitor must be well prepared and self sufficient.

Best Time To Visit: Refuge lands are open to the public at all times.

Fees: There are no visitor fees charged anywhere on the Arctic Refuge.

Accessibility: Unknown

Rules: With the remoteness and no facilities within the park each visitor must be well prepared and self sufficient.

Directions: Most visitors fly from Anchorage or Fairbanks to Kotzebue, and then fly to the parklands and nearby villages. During summer, a boat charter is available.

Map: Click here for a map to Noatak Biosphere Reserve

Reservations: Unknown

 
Address
Bob Gerhard, National Park Service
Box 1029
Kotzebue, Alaska 99752
Phone
General: (907) 442-3890
Fax: (907) 442-3482
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