Moose Study Area

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drawing of agricultural area by Martha Minchak, Rhode Island

 Viking Agricultural Area is located in the western portion of the study area. This area is intensively farmed with grain fields, alfalfa, sunflowers, and pasture lands interspersed with pockets of aspen woodlands and scrub-shrub wetlands. Moose numbers have remained stable in this area until 1996.

drawing of aspen woodlands by Martha Minchak, Rhode Islandclipart moosemoose prints

 

Agassiz National Wildlife Refuge and surrounding State Wildlife Management Areas make up 83,200 acres containing a large marsh complex, scrub-shrub wetlands, and aspen woodlands with a mixture of grasslands and black tamarack/black spruce bog. Moose numbers fluctuated between 200 and 400 + for years until 1993 when a dramatic decline began. Now the population sits at about 70 animals.

drawing of coniferous forest by Martha Minchak, Rhode Island

moose printsclipart cow

Beltrami Island State Forest Area is in the eastern portion of the study area. The 669,000 acres include large areas of coniferous forests, aspen woodlands, scrub-shrub wetlands and tamarack-black spruce bogs. The Red Lake Wildlife Management Area is located within the forest. During the last 30 years moose numbers have declined. Today, moose numbers are estimated to be less than one quarter the number found during the early 1940's.

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URL: http://midwest.fws.gov/agassiz/moose.html
Last updated on: January 4, 1999
Minnesota Moose Mystery managers:
Margaret Anderson, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Gretchen Mehmel, Minnesota DNR - Wildlife
Questions and comments on this web site: Mike Caucutt