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The Colorado River
Courtesy of EatStayPlay.com
The Colorado River is a vital core for a multitude of fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals of the canyon-lands area, serving as a water source, migration stopover, riparian refuge, prey habitat, and migration corridor. The Utah portion of the Colorado River harbors more critical habitat for the four Colorado River endangered fish than any other State in the basin. The razorback sucker, bonytail chub, humpback chub, and Colorado squawfish once inhabited the entire length of the Colorado River but have now been reduced to a mere fraction of their historic distribution.
An estimated 1,000 miles of fresh water shoreline are beside Mohave County along the Colorado River. Lake Havasu, Lake Mohave and Lake Mead make up a large part of the recreational areas along the river.
Rafting and Boating: From the gentle eddies of the remote lower Westwater Canyon to the violent whitewater gushing through Cataract Canyon, the Colorado River is a boating paradise that accommodates all river enthusiasts.
Fish and Wildlife: The Colorado River is an important water source for a variety of large mammals including mule deer, coyote, cougar, bobcat, pronghorn antelope, and desert bighorn.
Birds such as great blue heron, peregrine falcon, bald eagle, mallards, blue-winged teal, merganser, shoveler, and Canadian geese winter along the Colorado River. Navajo Sandstone cliffs provide excellent nesting sites for species like canyon wren, rock wren, killdeer, rock dove, red-tailed hawk, marsh hawk, kestrel, Southwest willow flycatcher, and golden eagle. These birds make the Colorado River a bird watcher's paradise.
Fish species in the Colorado River include flannel mouth sucker, catfish, bluegill, and speckled dace. Endangered fish such as Colorado squawfish, humpback chub, bony tail chub, and razorback sucker depend upon the warm silt-filled waters of the river and its tributaries. Red-spotted toads, bullfrogs, side-blotched lizards, stripped whip snakes, and gopher snakes are abundant throughout the riparian zones of the Colorado River.
Additional Activities: Auto touring, backpacking, biking, bird watching, boating, camping, fishing, hiking, horseback riding, interpretive programs, nature walks, sight seeing, whitewater rafting, wildlife viewing.

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Bureau of Land Management
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