Puneet Varma (Editor)

Tensas River National Wildlife Refuge

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Nearest city
  
Tallulah, Louisiana

Phone
  
+1 318-574-2664

Visitors
  
72,000 (in 2005)

Established
  
2000

Tensas River National Wildlife Refuge

Location
  
Madison / Tensas / Franklin parishes, Louisiana

Area
  
64,012 acres (259.05 km)

Governing body
  
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

Website
  
Tensas River National Wildlife Refuge

Address
  
2312 Quebec Rd, Tallulah, LA 71282, USA

Management
  
United States Fish and Wildlife Service

Hours
  
Open today · 8AM–4PMWednesday8AM–4PMThursday8AM–4PMFriday8AM–4PMSaturdayClosedSundayClosedMonday8AM–4PMTuesday8AM–4PMSuggest an edit

Bear on tensas river national wildlife refuge


The Tensas River National Wildlife Refuge is a protected wildlife area located west of the city of Tallulah in Madison, Tensas and Franklin parishes in northeastern Louisiana, USA.

Contents

Redheaded woodpecker on tensas river national wildlife refuge


Wildlife and habitatEdit

The refuge is in located in the upper basin of the Tensas River, the last documented home of the ivory-billed woodpecker. The refuge also has one of the last concentrations of the threatened Louisiana black bear. In 1907, Teddy Roosevelt hunted bear just north of the refuge boundary and the "teddy bear" was introduced as a result of an incident during the hunt. Concentrations of ducks, geese, raptors, wading birds and shorebirds are present. Several rookeries are in the reserve.

In 1932, Mason Spencer, a state representative from Tallulah, armed with a gun and a hunting permit, shot a rare male ivory-billed woodpecker on a large tract of swamp forest land owned by the Singer Sewing Company. He killed the bird to prove to the Department of Wildlife and Fisheries that the creature existed in Madison Parish, as that had been a matter in dispute. As this particular woodpecker faced ultimate extinction, as early as 1938, the Audubon Society persuaded U.S. Senator Allen J. Ellender to work for the establishment of a proposed Tensas Swamp National Park to preserve sixty thousand acres of lands then owned by the Singer Company. Ellender's bill died in committee, but in 1998, Congress established the Tensas River National Wildlife Refuge.

References

Tensas River National Wildlife Refuge Wikipedia


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