BCR 16.
Southern Rockies

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| Lewis' Woodpecker. Photo: USFWS |
This topographically complex
region includes the Wasatch and Uinta Mountains to the west
and the Southern Rocky Mountains to the east, separated by
the rugged tableland of the Colorado Plateau. Various coniferous
forest types (often lodgepole pine) interspersed with aspen
dominate higher elevations. These are replaced by pinyon-juniper
woodlands on the lower plateaus. Important birds also segregate
into elevational bands with Brown-capped
Rosy Finch and White-tailed Ptarmigan in alpine tundra,
Williamson's Sapsucker in conifers, Virginia's
Warbler and Lewis'
Woodpecker in montane shrub sites, and most of the world's
breeding Gray
Vireos in pinyon-juniper. High arid plains and dry upland
short-grass prairies provide critical breeding areas for Mountain
Plover. San Luis Valley wetlands and surrounding uplands
support one of the highest densities of nesting waterfowl
in North America, and provide migration habitat for Sandhill
Cranes and other wetland species.
Important Bird Areas in
this BCR
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Brown-capped Rosy Finch. Photo:
© Scott Streit
www.bird-friends.com |
Alamosa
National Wildlife Refuge
Arapaho
National Forest
Arapaho
National Wildlife Refuge
Curecanti
National Recreation Area
Gunnison
National Forest
Gunnison
Sage Grouse Area
Monte
Vista National Wildlife Refuge Complex
Rocky
Mountain National Park
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