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Lake Clark National Park & PreserveThe rosy finch is easy to identify - it's the only finch species with a solid, dark breast.
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Lake Clark National Park & Preserve
Animals
 
Large bull caribou shed the velvet on their antlers in August or September, just before the mating season.
A bull caribou from the Mulchatna herd grazes on fall
foliage in Lake Clark National Park and Preserve.
 

A bear splashes into a stream and emerges with a spawning salmon...tundra swans glide elegantly across a boggy pond...a porcupine curls up and shows his quills to a curious hiker...a sharp-shinned hawk dives on a redback vole...wolves howl into the winter night. Lake Clark National Park and Preserve teems with life.

A full complement of subarctic wildlife species inhabits the Lake Clark area. Thirty-seven species of terrestrial mammals are believed to be present in the region. Five different marine mammal species use haulout sites or feeding areas along the coast. The wood frog, the lone species of amphibian found in the region, inhabits the margins of lakes and ponds of the western foothills and the shores of Cook Inlet. Over 125 species of birds have been observed in the park and preserve. Fish include salmon, arctic char, arctic grayling, Dolly varden, northern pike, lake trout, and rainbow trout.

To learn more, click the links above or on the navigation bar to the left.

Interested in wildlife viewing in Lake Clark National Park and Preserve? Great! Click here for information.

Photo courtesy Rose Hedlund.
Subsistence use is permitted in the park.
Find out more about subsistence on Federal lands in Alaska.
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Dick Proenneke's cabin on Twin Lakes.  

Did You Know?
Dick Proenneke built his cabin on Twin Lakes in Lake Clark National Park and Preserve using only hand tools and his own labor. He began work on the cabin in 1967 at the age of 51 and lived there until 1998, when he was 82.

Last Updated: July 24, 2006 at 22:37 EST