MO-General+Watkins+Conservation+Area


 * =Birding in Missouri=

Scott County
=General Watkins Conservation Area= Benton, Missouri 63736 General Watkins Conservation Area Website General Watkins Conservation Area Map General Watkins Conservation Area Brochure

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General Watkins CA
Coordinates: 37.0753806, -89.6071972 eBird links: Hotspot map View details Recent visits My eBird links: Location life list Submit data

Tips for birding General Watkins Conservation Area
From Audubon Society of Missouri Birder's Guide

About General Watkins Conservation Area
General Watkins Conservation Area is in Scott County, 14 miles north of Sikeston and 15 miles south of Cape Girardeau. The area can be reached from US-61 and MO-77 and from county gravel roads. The Conservation Department purchased the tracts comprising the 1,108-acre area between 1978 and 1997.

Three miles south of Benton on US-61, or 1.5 miles south of Oran on MO-77. Additional access is provided by traveling 0.5 mile on County Park Road. Mostly forest (1007 acres total), but also has a nice mix of 30 wildlife food plots (30 acres total), five native warm season grass fields (20 acres total) and 10 acres of old fields. Facilities/features: camping area, picnic area, nine fishable lakes and ponds (20 acres total).

The area is named for a famous Missouri statesman and Civil War general, Nathanial Watkins, who lived here and is buried in a small cemetery in the forest.

General Watkins Conservation Area contains a forest type more closely resembling Appalachian than Missouri forests. Sweetgum, American beech, cucumber tree and tulip poplar are found here, along with tree species more common to Missouri, like white and red oak, maple, hickory and walnut. This mesic beech-oak forest type has spicebush, dogwood and paw paw growing in the shrub layer. The ground layer is dominated by Virginia creeper and poison ivy and also includes Christmas fern, broad beech fern and the state-rare beech drops and Virginia pennywort. Beech drops are brown-purple and grow only in beech forests; they are parasitic on beech roots. The pale green pennywort has pale lilac flowers in early spring but is difficult to find being only a few inches tall.

Natural erosion has worn steep-sided canyons up to 50 feet deep through the area's loess soils. People walking near these canyons should be cautious.

During your visit to General Watkins Conservation Area, you may view various forest management practices designed to improve wildlife habitat, maintain watershed quality and enhance tree growth, quality and species composition.

Wildlife management practices on Conservation Department lands include planting fields to serve as food sources for animals and the periodic harvest of timber to perpetuate the forest community and improve forage and cover for wildlife. From General Watkins Conservation Area Website

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media type="custom" key="26676348" || L353806 US US-MO US-MO-201 37.0753806 -89.6071972 General Watkins CA