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Query: Black duckResult: 110th of 227
American White Pelicans in Sunset (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos) <!--아메리카흰사다새-->
Subject: American White Pelicans in Sunset (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos)
Poster: Phoby (phoby@hanafos.com)
J[1]. N. Ding Darling National Wildlife Refuge.jpg
Resolution: 2250x1800 File Size: 396144 Bytes Date: 2004:12:25 23:06:14 Upload Date: 2004:12:25 22:58:23

American White Pelicans in Sunset (Pelecanus erythrorhynchos)


From the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's online digital media library.
Check http://images.fws.gov/ for higher quality version.

Metadata
Title: J. N. Ding Darling National Wildlife Refuge
Alternative Title: (none)
Creator: Gentry, George
Source: WV-9079-Centennial
Publisher: U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service
Contributor: NATIONAL CONSERVATION TRAINING CENTER-PUBLICATIONS AND TRAINING MATERIALS
Language: EN - ENGLISH
Rights: (public domain)
Audience: (general)
Subject: Florida, NWR, birds, Pelican, sunset

Description
Abstract: Gumbo limbo, Jamaica caper, strangler fig, red mangrove and white and black), night-blooming cereus, sea grapes, and cabbage palms . . . the plants that vegetate Ding Darling Refuge evoke a sense of the exotic and mysterious. And the wildlife are equally exotic: West Indian manatees, American alligators, American crocodiles, wood storks, roseate spoonbills, sea turtles, frigatebirds, gulf fritillaries, horseshoe crabs, dowitchers, black-whiskered vireos, and brown pelicans. For more than 2,000 years, the Calusa Indians called this tropical paradise home. By the mid-1800s, Europeans had displaced the tribe and used the island mostly for agriculture. In 1926, a fierce hurricane destroyed the agriculture industry. The refuge was established in 1945 as the "Sanibel National Wildlife Refuge." It was renamed in 1967 to honor pioneer conservationist/cartoonist/U.S. Biological Survey (later U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service) Director Jay Norwood "Ding" Darling. Ding Darling initiated the Federal Duck Stamp Program and designed the first Duck Stamp in 1934. Duck Stamps are required of all waterfowl hunters 16 and older. Revenues generated by Duck Stamp sales are used to buy wetlands to protect wildlife habitat. One of the best ways to see this barrier-island refuge off the southwest coast of Florida is by canoe. There are several canoe trails and canoes can be rented at the refuge. Auto-touring, hiking, fishing, and wildlife photography are also popular activities.

Date
Available: November 01 2002
Issued: November 01 2002
Modified: May 10 2004

Black duck
110/227
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