Grulla National Wildlife Refuge | |
Protected Area | |
Drift sand along the northeast fringe of Arch Lake
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Country | United States |
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States | New Mexico, Texas |
Region | Roosevelt County, New Mexico / Bailey County, Texas |
Elevation | 1,177 m (3,862 ft) |
Coordinates | |
Area | 13.1 km2 (5 sq mi) |
Founded | 1969 |
Management | U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service |
- location | Muleshoe, Texas |
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Website: Grulla NWR | |
Grulla National Wildlife Refuge is located primarily in eastern New Mexico in Roosevelt County, southwest of the intersection of State Highway 88 and the Texas - New Mexico border about 25 miles southeast of Portales, New Mexico and southeast of the tiny community of Arch. A very small part of the refuge extends eastward into western Bailey County, Texas.[1]
The central focal point of the Grulla National Wildlife Refuge is an ephemeral salt lake or saline playa – a shallow basin that collects runoff from the surrounding drainage area during heavy downpours but then often dries completely due to evaporation. This playa lake has been known by various names. Current USGS topographic maps and most commercially available maps of this region refer to this saline playa simply as "Salt Lake".[2][3] Back in the early 1880s, this playa was part of the DZ Ranch, and those familiar with the ranch often favor the name "DZ Lake". The lake is also frequently called "Arch Lake" after the nearby community of Arch, New Mexico, located around 6 km to the northwest.[4][5]
The word Grulla is Spanish for crane. When wet, the playa lake provides habitat to Sandhill Crane and the grasslands within the refuge provide habitat to other birds such as Ring-necked Pheasant, Lesser Prairie Chicken, and Scaled Quail.[6]
The refuge has no facilities other than a parking lot and trails and is administered by Muleshoe National Wildlife Refuge in Texas.
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