US-MA-Bolton+Flats+Wildlife+Management+Area


 * =Birding in Massachusetts=

Worcester County
=Bolton Flats Wildlife Management Area = Bolton, Massachusetts 01740 Bolton Flats Wildlife Management Area webpage Bolton Flats Wildlife Management Area map

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Bolton Flats WMA
Coordinates: 42.4640087, -71.6400582 eBird links: Hotspot map View details Recent visits My eBird links: Location life list Submit data

Bolton Flats
Coordinates: 42.450001, -71.650002 eBird links: Hotspot map View details Recent visits My eBird links: Location life list Submit data

About Bolton Flats Wildlife Management Area
The Bolton Flats Wildlife Management Area extends along the Nashua River in Harvard, Lancaster, and Bolton. The river here is slow and meandering, with adjacent High-Terrace Floodplain Forest and Low-Energy Riverbank. West of the river, a steep bank climbs up out of the floodplain forest onto a broad expanse of sand. Much of this sand has been mined away, but there is a remnant of Pitch Pine-Scrub Oak woods (on town-owned land) near the rail line.

The combination of a slow river, floodplain forest, and dry sand makes for excellent turtle habitat. In fact, Blanding's Turtles (Threatened), Wood Turtles (Special Concern), and Spotted Turtles have all been documented from this stretch of river. The marshes along the river also support rare marsh-nesting birds: American Bittern (Endangered), King Rail (Endangered), and Pied-billed Grebe (Endangered) have all been spotted here at some time of year.

Downstream of the Bolton Flats WMA is the 700-acre Oxbow National Wildlife Area, and west across the rail line is the former Fort Devens Military Reservation, about 5,000 acres, some of which is still used for military training, but much of which will eventually become protected for conservation. In the rapidly developing towns along US-2 west of Boston, these three properties form a large block of important rare species habitat. Such large blocks of open land, particularly those with a mosaic of upland and wetland habitats, are essential to the long-term survival of the Blanding's Turtle, which wanders one mile or more in a single season traveling among feeding, nesting, and wintering areas. From Bolton Flats Wildlife Management Area webpage

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