Juanita Woodlands (Kirkland, Washington)

USA / Washington / Inglewood-Finn Hill / Kirkland, Washington
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The Juanita Woodlands is 40 acres of undeveloped urban forest co-existing in a suburban environment. The Woodlands is located on Northeast Juanita Drive in unincorporated King County of the State of Washington. Juanita Woodlands is home to several species of birds, including Bald Eagle; Osprey; Great Horned Owl; Sharp-shinned and Cooper's hawks; Belted Kingfisher; Stellar's Jay; Evening Grosbeak; Pileated, Hairy, and Downy woodpeckers; and the Rufous Hummingbird. Mountain beaver, raccoon, skunk, and coyote are also present. Many other bird species, such as Peregrine Falcon, Northern Goshawk, storm-petrels, loons, and grebes, may depend on the forest's resources, while frogs, toads, salamanders, trout, salmon, shrews, and bats may depend on it for foraging and breeding.
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Coordinates:   47°42'22"N   122°14'16"W
This article was last modified 16 years ago