Salt Creek Wilderness

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LocationChaves County, New Mexico, United States
NearestcityRoswell
Coordinates33°35′16.7″N 104°21′46.7″W / 33.587972°N 104.362972°W / 33.587972; -104.362972
Area9,621 acres (38.93 km2)
Salt Creek Wilderness
Map showing the location of Salt Creek Wilderness
Map showing the location of Salt Creek Wilderness
Location in New Mexico
Map showing the location of Salt Creek Wilderness
Map showing the location of Salt Creek Wilderness
Location in United States
LocationChaves County, New Mexico, United States
Nearest cityRoswell
Coordinates33°35′16.7″N 104°21′46.7″W / 33.587972°N 104.362972°W / 33.587972; -104.362972
Area9,621 acres (38.93 km2)
Established1970
Governing bodyUnited States Fish and Wildlife Service

Salt Creek Wilderness is a designated Wilderness Area located on the Pecos River approximately 12 miles north-east of Roswell, New Mexico. Established in 1970 within the Bitter Lake National Wildlife Refuge, the 9,621 acre Wilderness is administered by the U. S Fish and Wildlife Service. Combining the scrub lands of the Chihuahuan Desert with the riparian environment of the Pecos River and the Artesian basin of eastern New Mexico, Salt Creek represents a rare convergence of desert and wetlands.

Bitter Lake N.W.R. Visitor Center

Established in 1937, the Bitter Lake National Wildlife Refuge is an important waypoint for thousands of migratory waterfowl, as well as the year-round home of a number of native species. Between October and February, the seasonal wetlands of the 24,609-acre unit are a temporary home to tens of thousands of ducks, geese, and cranes, as well as large populations of white pelicans and snowy egrets.[2]

The Wilderness

Unlike the riparian areas found in the other units of Bitter Lake NWR, which draw thousands of migratory waterfowl annually, the Salt Creek area sees few migratory birds, since the area has no wetlands. The Area was originally proposed as a Wilderness area to protect the red rock bluffs at the north end of the unit, home to populations of native species such as roadrunners and quail, as well as cottontails, black-tailed jackrabbits, deer, coyotes, and bobcats. The unit includes a section of the Pecos River, as well as a number of sinkhole lakes, many of which are habitat for the Pecos pupfish.

Location and Access

References

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