<%@LANGUAGE="JAVASCRIPT" CODEPAGE="1252"%> Cedar Keys National Wildlife Refuge

Tile banner- Cedar Keys National Wildlife Refuge

NEW Local Birding Festival! Lower Suwannee National Wildlife Refuge

Contact us for additional information
Refuge Staff
Directions and map
Refuge Wildlife
Habitat Management
What we do for people!
Calendar of Special Events

Refuge Regulations

Frequently asked questions
Volunteer Program
Refuge Internships
Refuge Publications (pdf files)
Join our Friends group:  Friends and Volunteers of Refuges
Recent News Releases
Great activities for Kids!!
Great ideas and Activities for Teachers and Homeschoolers!

Wildlife

Birds

Cedar Keys provides habitat for a variety of wildlife species – most notably wading birds and shorebirds. Egrets, herons, pelicans, cormorants, and white ibis are commonly seen and many nest on island interiors. Magnificent Frigate Birds rest here for the summer and provide a superb photographic subject. During the 1960’s and 1970’s, 200,000 birds nested on Cedar Keys NWR islands. Today that number is about 20,000. Ospreys and occasionally bald eagles also nest on the islands. More than 250 species of birds have been documented on the refuge.

Hundreds of shorebirds forage on island beaches, in search of small fish and other marine creatures they need for survival. Magnificent frigate birds and ospreys can often be seen circling the coastal waters.

Other Wildlife

The islands are famous for another type of resident – cottonmouth snakes. Snake densities on some of the islands are significant. For this reason and to protect nesting birds, interiors of all islands except Atsena Otie Key are closed to all public entry and use.

Small mammals and other reptiles inhabit some of the islands.

Nesting Egrets

Cottonmouth

Shorebirds at Atsena Otie Key

White Ibis

 

last updated
March 13, 2008
webmaster

foot banner Refuges... where wildlife comes naturally

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Home Page | Department of the Interior | USA.gov | About the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service |
Accessibility
| Privacy | Notices | Disclaimer | FOIA