Pickerel Creek Wildlife Area--Boggy Bottoms

About this Location

Pickerel Creek was the “flagship project” of Ohio’s initial North American Waterfowl Management Plan efforts and the first project, outlined here, restored 380 acres of emergent marsh on the Pickerel Creek Wildlife Area and paved the way for a series of important projects to follow.

Ducks Unlimited helped complete the second phase of the Pickerel Creek project in 1993 by restoring 475 acres of wetlands, helping complete the Boggy Bottoms project in 2004 in the same area, and enhancing 40 acres of moist-soil wetlands. A National Coastal Wetlands Conservation grant was used in 2008 to restore 283 acres of mixed wetland types and more than 100 acres of native prairie within Pickerel Creek WA.

This project was funded in part by a North American Wetlands Conservation Act (NAWCA) grant. Ducks Unlimited helped secure this first standard NAWCA grant for conservation work in Ohio.

About Pickerel Creek Wildlife Area

See all hotspots at Pickerel Creek Wildlife Area

During the spring and fall migrations, large numbers of waterfowl are attracted to the area. Mallard, wood duck, black duck, blue-winged teal, and green-winged teal are the most abundant species, with wigeon, pintail, gadwall, and shoveler appearing in smaller numbers. Canada geese also use the area. Other bird species include the trumpeter and tundra swans, common tern, great blue heron, great egret, black-crowned night heron, woodcock, snipe, sora, Virginia rail, and mourning dove. Bald eagles nest in the area and both adults and immature are frequently seen year-round.

The geographic location of Pickerel Creek, along the southern shore of Lake Erie, also accounts for high numbers of songbirds, shorebirds, and hawks during the spring and fall migrations. Upland game animals and furbearers are also plentiful including cottontail rabbit, white-tailed deer, woodchuck, muskrat, raccoon, and mink.

Pickerel Creek Wildlife Area lies between the south shore of Sandusky Bay and US-6 in Townsend and Riley townships, Sandusky County. The area totals 3,200 acres. The majority of the area has been restored to wetlands with the remainder in woods, brush, and native grassland. Pickerel Creek flows through the western half of the area, forming a high-quality freshwater estuarine habitat.

The northern portion of Pickerel Creek Wildlife Area lies in the center of some of the finest wetland habitats still in existence along Sandusky Bay. Early records reveal an extensive wet prairie in this vicinity. Wild rice and other waterfowl foods grew in abundance in the clear waters of Sandusky Bay. As the surrounding land was cleared and drained for agricultural use, wetland habitat was seriously damaged. The turbid water no longer supported the huge beds of wild rice and other high-quality aquatic vegetation, and waterfowl numbers decreased.

The Division of Wildlife acquired Pickerel Creek Wildlife Area in 1987. Since this region continues to support a good waterfowl population, Pickerel Creek is presently managed as a public hunting, fishing, trapping, and wildlife observation area with an emphasis on waterfowl and other wetland wildlife.

Features

  • Restrooms on site

Content from Pickerel Creek Wildlife Area Official Website, Ducks Unlimited, and Ohio Ornithological Society