Caloosahatchee National Wildlife Refuge - Florida
The Caloosahatchee National Wildlife Refuge is located on the Caloosahatchee River, beneath the I-75 Caloosahatchee Bridge, within the city of North Fort Myers. It is administered as part of the J. N. "Ding" Darling National Wildlife Refuge Complex.
maps J.N. Ding Darling - Refuge Complex Map Map of the J.N. 'Ding' Darlng National Wildlife Refuge Complex (NWR), consisting of the Ding Darling NWR, Pine Island NWR, Island Bay NWR, Matlacha Pass NWR, Caloosahatchee NWR. Published by the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (USFWS).
brochures Caloosahatchee - Fact Sheet Fact Sheet for Caloosahatchee National Wildlife Refuge (NWR) in Florida. Published by the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service (USFWS).
Caloosahatchee NWR
https://www.fws.gov/refuge/Caloosahatchee
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caloosahatchee_National_Wildlife_Refuge
The Caloosahatchee National Wildlife Refuge is located on the Caloosahatchee River, beneath the I-75 Caloosahatchee Bridge, within the city of North Fort Myers. It is administered as part of the J. N. "Ding" Darling National Wildlife Refuge Complex.
U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service
Caloosahatchee
National Wildlife Refuge
photo: Steve Alvarez
Refuge Facts
■ Established: 1920.
■
Acres: 40.
■
Wildlife population surveys.
■
Location: the refuge is located near
interstate 75 on the Caloosahatchee
River in Lee County within the city
of Ft. Myers, FL.
■
Partnerships.
■
Education/interpretation.
■
Chemical and mechanical control of
invasive exotic plants.
■
Administered as part of the J. N.
“Ding” Darling National Wildlife
Refuge Complex.
photo: Charlie Heidecker ©
photo: J. Chas. McCullough
photo: Steve Alvarez
Natural History
■ The refuge consists of several
mangrove islands covered with a
variety of fresh and brackish water
vegetation. Upland vegetation
includes cabbage palms, sea
grapes, and an assortment of other
subtropical plants. Wetland habitat
consists primarily of mangrove forestred, black and white mangroves.
Paul Tritaik, Refuge Manager
J.N. ”Ding“ Darling NWR Complex
1 Wildlife Drive
Sanibel, FL 33957
Phone: 239/472 1100
Fax: 239/472 4061
E-mail: FW4RWDingDarling@fws.gov
Management Tools
■ Law enforcement.
■
Mangroves act as fish nurseries
that attract foraging water birds.
Mangroves also provide feeding,
loafing, and roosting habitat for
shorebirds, gulls, terns, pelicans,
cormorants, and other water birds.
■
The refuge is located adjacent to the
Florida Power and Light Company’s
Orange River Power Plant. The
warm water out-flow from the power
plant is a major wintering area for
the endangered Florida manatee.
Refuge Objectives
■ To protect and provide suitable
habitat for endangered and
threatened species including the
Florida manatee, wood stork,
eastern indigo snake, American
crocodile, and bald eagle.
■
■
To implement sound wildlife
management techniques to provide
feeding, nesting, and roosting
habitat for a wide diversity of shore
birds, wading birds, waterfowl,
raptors, and neo-tropical migratory
species.
To provide wildlife oriented
recreation compatible with the
purposes for which the refuge was
established.
Public Use Opportunities
■ Salt water fishing.
■
Wildlife photography.
■
Canoeing and kayaking.
■
Manatee viewing area adjacent to
the refuge. (Partnership with Lee
County Manatee Park).
■
Boat access only.
Questions and Answers
Where is Caloosahatchee NWR?
Caloosahatchee National Wildlife
Refuge is located in Fort Myers,
beneath the I-75 Caloosahatchee
Bridge. The refuge includes three
islands and is 40 acres in size. The
original refuge boundary has been
lost due to channelization of the river
and deposition of dredged spoil upon
the islands. The nearest population
center is the City of Fort Myers,
located seven miles to the west.
How do I get there?
Access to the islands that makeup the
Caloosahatchee NWR is by boat only.
Boaters should consult navigational
charts and tide schedules before
attempting to visit any of the refuge
islands. Boaters should note that
seasonal boat speed restriction zones
are strictly enforced for the protection
of the Florida manatees that frequent
the Caloosahatchee and Orange rivers.
Where is the refuge closed to public use?
The Caloosahatchee NWR receives
little public use. Access onto the
refuge is difficult in the mangrove
areas and there are no boat docking
and mooring facilities. Occasionally,
boaters visit one of the islands with
uplands but mosquitoes are usually so
numerous that visiting the islands are
extremely uncomfortable.