Yukon Flats National Wildlife Refuge - Nome, AK
eatstayplay.comeatstayplay.com - Alaska - Yukon Flats National Wildlife Refuge
Click here to enter Kim's Blog!
Click here for the EatStayPlay.com Newsletter!
Click here for the Tees and Stuff!
Click here for videos!
Click here to shop EatStayPlay.com!
Click here to advertise!
Home
 Alaska
 Far North
 Nome
 Wildlife Viewing

Yukon Flats National Wildlife Refuge
GPS Coordinates: N 64° 50.298 W 147° 42.509
Find geocaches near Yukon Flats National Wildlife Refuge
What is a geocache? Click here to find about geocaching

Wildlife viewing
Courtesy of EatStayPlay.com
The third largest conservation area in the National Wildlife Refuge System, the 9 million acre Yukon Flats National Wildlife Refuge is located in eastern interior Alaska. It includes the Yukon Flats, a vast wetland basin bisected by the Yukon River. The basin is underlain by permafrost and includes a complex network of lakes, streams, and rivers. The area is characterized by mixed forests dominated by spruce, birch, and aspen. The Yukon Flats has a continental sub-arctic climate, with great seasonal extremes in temperature and daylight.
The refuge supports the highest density of breeding ducks in Alaska, and includes one of the greatest waterfowl breeding areas in North America. In fact, most of Yukon Flats' birds are seasonal residents, fleeing south before the hard grip of winter closes over the land. Some 13 species, however (including boreal chickadees, great gray owls, spruce grouse, three-toed woodpeckers and ravens), remain on the refuge year around.
The same landscape that so favors waterfowl is also beneficial to furbearers, many of which, including beaver, lynx, marten, mink, muskrat and river otter, thrive on the water-laced flood plain. Moose benefit from the new growth encouraged by fire and flood, and can be found throughout the refuge. These large ungulates are the region's most important game animal; to the point that, for many subsistence hunters living on or around the refuge, "moose" is virtually synonymous with "meat."
Grizzly bears are found throughout the refuge in low concentrations, while the more common black bears tend to keep to the forested lowlands. Wolves can also be encountered anywhere on the refuge, but are rarely sighted. Dall sheep can be spotted on the alpine tundra of the White Mountains and Hodzana Highlands.


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

Best Time To Visit: Open year round.

Fees: None.

Accessibility: Unknown

Rules: Unknown

Directions: Access is primarily by aircraft and boat. There are regularly scheduled commercial flights between Fairbanks and the seven villages in or near the refuge. Visitors may also drive the Steese Highway (a gravel road) from Fairbanks to the Yukon River, at Circle, and travel down the river via watercraft into the refuge.

Map: Click here for a map to Yukon Flats National Wildlife Refuge

Reservations: Unknown

 
Address
Ted Heuer, Refuge Manager
101 12th Avenue; Room 264,
Box 14
Fairbanks, Alaska 99701
Phone
General: (907) 456-0440
Fax: (907) 456-0447
WebsiteEmail
Twitter
Facebook
EatStayPlay.com on YouTube!
Copyright 2003-2011      12/26/2011
HOMECONTACT USPRIVACYABOUT USADVERTISE