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  1. J. Clark Salyer National Wildlife Refuge provides important habitat for thousands of migratory birds. Over 250 bird species are found here, including waterfowl, shorebirds, raptors, and songbirds. Many mammals live on the Refuge as well.

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  2. Hunters find plenty of deer and not much competition on this 59,000-acre Refuge. Hunters who know the area have learned where deer feed and rest and enjoy stalking through the habitat. The Refuge is open for firearms and archery seasons. A Refuge permit is required for antlered deer.

  3. J. Clark Salyer National Wildlife Refuge is located along the Souris River in Bottineau and McHenry Counties in north-central North Dakota. The refuge of 58,693 acres (237.5 km 2) extends from the Manitoba border southward for approximately 45 miles (72 km) in an area which was once Glacial Lake Souris. The area is old lake bottom and has ...

  4. Overview. The J. Clark Salyer National Wildlife Refuge was first established as the Lower Souris National Wildlife Refuge in September 1935, and officially changed to its current name in September 1967. The primary habitat management goal is to preserve, restore, and enhance Souris River Basin habitats, which include prairie wetlands, riparian ...

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  5. Salyer is directly responsible for the wildlife refuge system as it is today. Working with his own extensive knowledge of American ecology and Alpo Leopold's principles of conservation management which he had learned at Central, he grew the wildlife refuge system of the United States from 1.5 million acres upon his appointment, to 29 million ...

  6. This 58,700-acre refuge extends approximately 45 miles along the Souris River. The refuge is named for Missouri native J. Clark Salyer, chief of the Division of Wildlife Refuges in the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service from 1934 to 1961.

  7. A graduate of Central College (now Central Methodist University), Salyer expanded the newly-minted Wildlife Refuge System into the robust, well-admired program that it is today, earning himself the title of "Father of the National Wildlife Refuge System."

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