Watching Kansas Wildlife
A Guide to 101 Sites
Bob Gress and George Potts
117 pages, 7 maps, 4 color illustrations, 39 color photographs,
6 x 9
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0594-1, $9.95
In Schermerhorn Park amidst a
typical Ozark landscape of oak- and hickory-covered hillsides--brilliant
orange cave salamanders hide and bats hang out in the twilight
zone of Schermerhorn cave, spring peepers serenade from area
marshes, black redhorse and greenside darters swim through swift,
clear Shoal Creek, and flying squirrels and Carolina chickadees
explore their southeast Kansas woodland home.
Catty-corner across the state in the arid "badlands"
along the Arikaree River, mule deer, coyotes, and Ord's kangaroo
rats roam among the yucca and prickly pear cactus, while black-tailed
prairie dogs scurry about town and burrowing owls guard their
abodes.
From border to border, Kansas provides a variety of environments-often
overlapping and changing gradually from east to west and north
to south-that attract an assortment of animals. In Watching
Kansas Wildlife, Bob Gress and George Potts have selected
101 prime sites for viewing the state's amazingly diverse array
of wildlife. They've included spots in every part of the state
and a variety of terrains and animals of every kind, including
mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish and insects.
For each site, the authors have recorded what animals can
be seen and what type of environment they live in; information
on land ownership (whether private or public, all sites are accessible
to the public); availability of park facilities; and viewing
tips. Having divided the state into six parts, they have provided
maps of each region and color photographs of many of the sites
and animals.
Gress and Potts have also made a list of the "dynamic
dozen" sites, the top twelve places they consider "can't-miss
opportunities" because of exceptional wildlife, scenery,
and viewing attributes. These include southwestern Cimarron National
Grasslands, where elk, pronghorns, western rattlesnakes, Texas
horned lizards, an occasional porcupine or roadrunner, and Santa
Fe Trail wagon ruts can be seen on the sandsage prairie; central
Cheyenne Bottoms, the largest marsh in the interior of the United
States and the most important shorebird migration point in the
western hemisphere; and the eastern Flint Hills, the largest
remaining expanse of tallgrass prairie in the country.
Whether big or small, well known or more obscure, the sites
in this guide provide an opportunity to view animals in their
own intricately balanced worlds and some of the state's most
beautiful natural environments.
"A delightful directory to wildlife watching in Kansas"--Joseph
T. Collins, coauthor of Kansas Wildlife
BOB GRESS is director of Wichita Wild in the Wichita
Department of Parks and Recreation, a widely published photographer,
and coauthor of Kansas Wildlife.
GEORGE POTTS is professor of biology at Friends University
and co-compiler of A Checklist of the Vertebrate Animals of
Kansas.
Published for the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks
by the University Press of Kansas
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