MO-Schell-Osage+Conservation+Area


 * =Birding in Missouri=

Vernon County
=Schell-Osage Conservation Area= Schell City, Missouri 64783 Schell-Osage Conservation Area Website Schell-Osage Conservation Area Map Schell-Osage Conservation Area Brochure

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Schell-Osage CA (St. Clair Co.)
Coordinates: 38.0113585, -94.05123 eBird links: Hotspot map View details Recent visits My eBird links: Location life list Submit data

Schell-Osage CA (Vernon Co.)
Coordinates: 38.0100645, -94.0720497 eBird links: Hotspot map View details Recent visits My eBird links: Location life list Submit data

Tips for birding Schell-Osage Conservation Area
Taberville Prairie (1,680 acres) and Schell-Osage (8,633 acres) conservation areas. Taberville Prairie is habitat for birds such as greater prairie chickens, upland sandpipers, and Henslow's sparrows. Schell-Osage hosts a variety of wetland species. Taberville Prairie is 13 miles north of El Dorado Springs on County Road H. Schell-Osage, 10 miles north of El Dorado Springs, may be entered from the east via H, then Y, or from the west via AA, then RA. From Missouri Department of Conservation "Best Missouri Birding Areas"

About Schell-Osage Conservation Area
Schell-Osage Conservation Area is six miles west of El Dorado Springs on MO-54 to Route AA, then north 12 miles to Route RA. The area headquarters is one mile east on RA, an additional half-mile east on gravel, then a quarter mile south on 2950 Road. This area provides waterfowl hunting opportunity for up to 43 parties of hunters in the wetland units, including 25 blinds (two are disabled-accessible) and 18 designated wade-and-shoot positions (two of which are field opportunities).

The area also contains fishable lakes and ponds totaling over 900 acres, in addition to opportunity on the Osage River Arm of Truman Reservoir. There is also a boat ramp and primitive campground on each lake.

Schell-Osage Conservation Area and the Osage River, which forms the area's north boundary, derive their names from the Osage Indians that once inhabited the area.

Initially purchased in 1957, development of the wetland units and water supply lakes was completed in 1962 and opened to waterfowl hunting in 1964.

The Harry S. Truman Dam and Reservoir was completed in 1979, which affected flood frequency and duration of the Osage River and floodplain, including portions of Schell-Osage.

The area features a unique combination of habitats including roughly 1,900 acres of bottomland and upland forest, 1,800 acres of cropland, 1,700 acres of old fields, and over 900 acres of lakes and ponds. Also, Little Headwaters, Little Gem, Little Stony Point, Little Savanna, and Little Sandy prairies combine to make up over 40 acres of remnant native prairie, which have been augmented with an additional 170 acres of restored grasslands.

The nearly 1,800 acres of seasonally flooded wetlands provide habitat for a wide variety of waterfowl, shorebirds, wading birds, and other wetland-dependent species, which makes this area popular for both waterfowl hunters and birders. From Schell-Osage Conservation Area Website

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media type="custom" key="28893068" || L3779179	US	US-MO	US-MO-185	38.0113585	-94.05123	Schell-Osage CA (St. Clair Co.) L273053	US	US-MO	US-MO-217	38.0100645	-94.0720497	Schell-Osage CA (Vernon Co.)