Pine Creek Wildlife Management Area
Pine Creek WMA consists of 10,280 acres (41.6 km). It is adjacent to Little River and its impoundment, Pine Creek Lake, which offers additional and coextensive protected areas for wildlife.
Ecosystem
Trees include six species of oak as well as ash, hickory, pine, river birch, and willow. Sand plum, holly, sumac, and a great variety of grasses and legumes are also present.
Soil types range from deep sand to rocky.
The area receives approximately 53 inches (1,300 mm) of rain per year, and is well-watered.
Game species are abundant: bobwhite quail, whitetail deer, eastern wild turkeys, cottontail rabbits and swamp rabbits, coyote, bobcats, beavers, mink, raccoons, doves, and geese may all be found in varying numbers.
Nongame species are also in evidence: black bear, river otters, and bald eagles are also part of the WMA's ecosystem. None of these nongame species may be hunted. Eagles winter at Pine Creek Lake and travel the Little River watershed.
Management
Intensive management practices maintain old farm field habitat, as well as a variety of natural landscapes. Approximately 250 acres (1.0 km) of food plots are planted yearly. Management practices include burning, plowing, and brush hogging provide native plant food resources and maintain habitat diversity.
See also
References
- ^ All information courtesy general profile description by Richard Beagles, biologist, Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation, available via http://www.wildlifedepartment.com/pinecreek.htm.
External links
- Pine Creek Wildlife Management Area - Oklahoma Department of Wildlife Conservation