MO-Wilhelmina+Conservation+Area

=Wilhelmina Conservation Area= Campbell, Missouri 63933 Wilhelmina Conservation Area Website Wilhelmina Conservation Area Map Wilhelmina Conservation Area Brochure
 * =Birding in Missouri=

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Butler County
No hotspots have been established in Butler County. Please suggest one if you are birding in this section of the Conservation Area.

Wilhelmina CA
Coordinates: 36.5252256, -90.1780128 eBird links: Hotspot map View details Recent visits My eBird links: Location life list Submit data

About Wilhelmina Conservation Area
The entrance to the main tract is in Dunklin County north of Campbell on MO-53, then 4.5 miles west on Route DD and west again on County Road 203. This area is mostly forest with some cropland. It contains a portion of the old channel of the St. Francis River.

Wilhelmina Conservation Area is located about six miles southeast of Qulin and lies in both Butler and Dunklin counties. The Butler County portion of the area lies two miles south of MO-53 and is accessible off County Road 220 via an unimproved dirt road. The Dunklin County land is bisected by Route DD and several county roads.

This 1,476-acre conservation area is named after the small town of Wilhelmina, which is partially surrounded by Department-owned land. Purchased between 1980 and 1987 with Conservation Department funds, Wilhelmina Conservation Area fills a void in a region that previously had very little public land.

Part of the area lies along the channel of the St. Francis River. The river has been diverted into the Wilhelmina Cutoff and the old river channel has become a backwater slough. The cutoff also passes through the Wilhelmina Conservation Area.

Forested areas are dominated by bottomland hardwood tree species including bald cypress, water tupelo, red maple, water hickory, green ash, willow, pin oak, overcup oak, and willow oak.

During your visit to the area, you may see various forest improvement practices designed to improve wildlife habitat and to maintain watershed quality. Any disturbance is only temporary, and the normal aesthetic appearance will soon return.

Wildlife management includes manipulation of fields within the forest to provide added food sources. Open areas are maintained to supplement natural conditions. Timber harvests are also an important element in the production of forage and cover to create suitable wildlife habitat for the greatest diversity of game and non-game species. From Wilhelmina Conservation Area Website

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media type="custom" key="26662142" || L502500 US US-MO US-MO-069 36.5252256 -90.1780128 Wilhelmina CA