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Wildlife

COYOTE
Coyotes are survivors and thrive in Southern Nevada despite the coyote1.jpg (8333 bytes) boom in human population and development. They live in large numbers around the wetlands and flood channels because of the water and the abundant prey. This one, caught on video the same night as the beaver, was crossing Duck Creek near the Silver Bowl Stadium.

BEAVER
When Europeans arrived in North America, beaverhead.jpg (10260 bytes) beavers were reported in every pond and stream. After a few centuries of trapping, their numbers crashed. Now they are rebounding and returning to all their original range. They have returned to the Las Vegas Valley from the Colorado River system.

RABBIT
One reason coyotes like the wetlands is rabbit1.jpg (11761 bytes) the number of cottontail rabbits. The Cottontails enjoy eating the lawns at the Sam Boyd Stadium. 

 

LIZARD
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Prey draws many kinds of desert creatures to the wetlands. This lizard is dining on a tasty spider.

TOAD
The only species endemic to the Las Vegas toad.jpg (8635 bytes) Valley believed to have become extinct during the Twentieth Century is the Valley Leopard Frog. But frogs and toads like this one remain plentiful in Clark County Wetlands Park, making good feeding for wading birds such as egrets and herons.

DRAGONFLY
This spectacular individual is one of several dragonfly.jpg (8883 bytes) dragonflies in the wash and one of a huge number of different insects, which attract a variety of interesting predators, from roadrunners to toads.

FISH
Fish pop up in the wetlands, usually wherever fish1.jpg (6123 bytes) they can find a pool which lasts for awhile. Carp are frequently found there; these little ones are mosquito fish.

 

CRAYFISH

Use of the insecticide Baytex in Las Vegas Wash crayfish1.jpg (8154 bytes) to control mosquitoes during the 1970s killed many other creatures and disrupted the food chain so that bird counts dropped drastically. Baytex also killed all the crayfish, a crucial food for birds. Now crayfish are back in healthy numbers.

Bats (click here)

Exciting new research is now underway at the Wetlands. Click here for more information.

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