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Colorado IBAs
North Star Nature Preserve

Pitkin County
Size: 175 acres
Elevation: 8000 feet

Habitats: Wetlands, high elevation riparian, open water, aspen, mixed conifer, sagebrush shrubland

Ownership: Municipal (Pitkin County)

Land Use:
Primary – nature and wildlife conservation
Secondary – recreation/tourism, research, fishing

IBA Criteria: 2, 3, 4

Site description

Location:
The North Star Nature Preserve is located just east of the city of Aspen. Limited housing borders the property on the east, west and south, and U.S. Forest Service property borders on the south.

Vegetative/natural features:
The site is bisected by the Roaring Fork River, and contains high altitude wetlands and riparian areas. Significant features include willows and cottonwoods in old oxbows, a sedge marsh, wet meadows, dry meadows, aspen and coniferous forest, and open Gambel oak with Douglas-fir.

Ornithological Importance

The site’s diversity of habitat types in a relatively undeveloped area provide feeding, shelter, and breeding grounds for resident species and neotropical migrants. There is a heron rookery located to the east, from which herons frequently come to the site to feed.

Breeding species:

Average #

Maximum #

Red-winged Blackbird

500

 

Violet-green Swallow

100’s

 

Red-naped Sapsucker

15

 

Cordilleran Flycatcher

30

 

MacGillivray’s Warbler

30

 

Western Tanager

25

 

Northern Goshawk

1 pair

 

Red-tailed Hawk

1 pair

 

Virginia Rail

20 pairs

 

Sora

30 pairs

 

Yellow Warbler

25 pairs

 

Song Sparrow

50 pairs

 

Fox Sparrow

30 pairs

 

Great Blue Heron

5 pairs

 

Lincoln Sparrow

30 pairs

 

Green-tailed Towhee

15 pairs

 

Belted Kingfisher

8 pairs

 

Orange-crowned Warbler

25 pairs

 
     

Research and educational activities: Preserve managers hold educational classes for students and adults at the site.

Conservation/Management Issues

Serious threats:

  • invasive/non-native plants (thistle, toadflax, oxeye daisy).

Minor threats:

  • cowbird parasitism;
  • disturbance to birds and habitat by recreational use.

Efforts to address threats:
Preserve managers have begun hand-pulling of invasive plants.

Management details:
Pitkin County acquired the site in the late 1970s, with the help of The Nature Conservancy. Since that time, the site has recovered from the effects of the hay ranching and grazing that took place during the 1950s and 1960s.

Development pressures in Pitkin County are intense. Use by commercial kayakers and paragliders is active on 15% of the site, and threatens to create a park out of a nature preserve.

 

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