The Great Florida Birding Trail

Newsday

September 7, 2008

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The marshes line the shore at the Guana River Wildlife Management Area, a site on the Great Florida Birding Trail's eastern section.  The 9,815-acre area, just 15 miles south of Jacksonville, sees roseate spoonbills and other wading birds in late summer and year-round, large numbers of water fowl. A birder can drive through its miles of roads leading through habitats of maritime hammock, coastal xeric scrub, marshes, and flatwoods.
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The marshes line the shore at the Guana River Wildlife Management Area, a site on the Great Florida Birding Trail's eastern section. The 9,815-acre area, just 15 miles south of Jacksonville, sees roseate spoonbills and other wading birds in late summer and year-round, large numbers of water fowl. A birder can drive through its miles of roads leading through habitats of maritime hammock, coastal xeric scrub, marshes, and flatwoods. (Photo by David Moynahan)

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