- Sheldon National Wildlife Refuge
The Sheldon National Wildlife Refuge is a 575,000-acre national wildlife refuge located on the northern border of the U.S. state of
Nevada . It is managed by theUnited States Fish and Wildlife Service as the Nevada component of theSheldon-Hart Mountain National Wildlife Refuge Complex , which is managed inLakeview, Oregon . The Sheldon Refuge is noted for its population of wild horses.Description
The Sheldon National Wildlife Refuge occupies an arid zone of volcanic terrain. Rockhounds search for semiprecious stones such as
fire opal s.Geothermal hot springs provide some water. The dominant ecosystem plant life consists of drought-tolerant species such assagebrush ,juniper ,mountain mahogany ,bitterbrush , and aspen. The elevation ranges from 4,100 feet to 7,200 feet above sea level.In this forbidding landscape lives a large population of free-range
fauna , with the American mustang, the so-called "wild horse" of the American West, being the best known. There are also large herds ofmule deer , an estimated 3,500pronghorn , and a small but self-sustaining population ofbighorn sheep .The bighorn are not strictly native to the Sheldon Refuge, having been extirpated there during the frontier era and successfully reintroduced about 1930.cite web|url=http://www.fws.gov/Refuges/profiles/index.cfm?id=14621|title="Sheldon National Wildlife Refuge"|work=
United States Fish and Wildlife Service |accessdate=2008-07-01] The pronghorn "antelope" played a key role in the history of the Refuge, as approximately 94 percent of the current protected land area was originally set aside as the "Charles Sheldon Antelope Range" in 1936.cite web|url= http://www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/birds/chekbird/r1/sheldon.htm|title="Bird Checklists of hte United States: Sheldon National Wildlife Refuge"|work=United States Geological Survey |accessdate=2008-07-01]The Refuge appears to be the home of an
endemic fish species of limited geographic distribution, theAlvord chub .The nearest community of any size is
Denio, Nevada , 14 miles from the Refuge's eastern boundary. The nearest divided highway isInterstate 80 inWinnemucca, Nevada , approximately 100 miles to the south.Controversy
Proposals to
cull some of the alleged excess population of mustang in the Sheldon National Wildlife Refuge were drawing public concernas of 2008 . The official Fish and Wildlife (USFWS) position, as stated on their Refuge website, was that "horses and burros are not native to Sheldon Refuge. They are descended from domestic stock turned loose around the turn of the twentieth century. They are primarily grass eaters, and their grazing can devastate native vegetation and cause severe damage toriparian habitat."In response, the
American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign accused the USFWS of conducting "helicopter round-ups duringfoal ing season" in the Sheldon Refuge.cite web|url=http://www.wildhorsepreservation.com/sheldon.html|title="AWHPC - Sheldon Round-Up, June 2006"|work=American Wild Horse Preservation Campaign|accessdate=2008-07-01]References
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