USFWS
Togiak National Wildlife Refuge
Alaska Region   

Refuge Features

Rainbow scene.  USFWS.  Click to Enlarge. Togiak National Wildlife Refuge includes 4.7 million acres of land in southwest Alaska between Kuskokwim Bay and Bristol Bay. The eastern boundary of Togiak Refuge is about 350 air miles southwest of Anchorage. The Togiak Refuge is bordered on the north by Yukon Delta National Wildlife Refuge, and on the east by Wood-Tikchik State Park. Togiak Refuge is roadless; primary access is via air or water.

Togiak Refuge features a variety of landscapes, including mountain crags, fast-flowing rivers, deep lakes, tundra, marshy lowlands, ponds, estuaries, coastal lagoons, and sea cliffs. The broad glacial valleys of the Ahklun Mountain range cut the tundra uplands, opening into coastal plains. The Ahklun Mountains spread across 80 percent of Togiak Refuge.

Refuge Purposes

The Alaska National Interest Land Claims Act (ANILCA) sets forth the following major purposes for which the Togiak National Wildlife Refuge was established and shall be managed:

  1. to conserve fish and wildlife populations and habitat;
  2. to fulfill the international treaty obligations of the United States with respect to fish and wildlife and their habitats;
  3. to provide the opportunity for continued subsistence uses by local residents;
  4. to ensure water quality and necessary water quantity within the refuge.

Fish, Wildlife, and Habitats

Togiak Refuge
map.  USFWS.  Click to EnlargeTogiak Refuge is home to many resident bird species, and provides breeding and resting areas for numerous migratory birds returning from wintering areas around the world. More than 30 species of mammals are present, including brown bear, moose, caribou, wolves, and wolverines. Seals, sea lions, walrus, and seven species of whales are found along the shorelines of Togiak Refuge. The refuge provides more than 1,500 miles of stream and river habitat necessary for five species of salmon and many other fish that inhabit Togiak Refuge. The Kanektok, Togiak, and Goodnews Rivers are three of the refuge's major watersheds. A total of 295 wildlife species are found on Togiak Refuge, including 214 bird species, 31 terrestrial mammal species, 17 marine mammal species, and 33 fish species.

Visitor Use

Some of the finest salmon and trout sport fishing waters in Alaska are on Togiak National Wildlife Refuge. The coastal portion of the refuge provides excellent opportunities for photography and wildlife viewing. River rafting is popular on several refuge rivers. Non-guided and commercially guided opportunities are available for sport fishing, hunting, flightseeing, river rafting, and wildlife viewing.

Geology:

A variety of events, including tectonic activity, volcanic activity, sedimentary processes, glacial activity, and erosion, have shaped the physical features of Togiak Refuge.

Many geological features of the Togiak Refuge result from ice sheets that once covered much of the area. The last two major ice advances occurred about 35,000 and 15,000 years ago. The most spectacular features of ice erosion are along the eastern boundary of the Togiak Refuge, where alpine areas include hanging valleys, cirques, and glacial moraines. Elongated lakes, some more than 900 feet deep, lie in glacier-scoured bedrock. Volcanic eruptions underneath glacial ice formed a rare and unique flat topped volcano, or tuya, about 15 miles northeast of the present day village of Twin Hills.

History

Archaeological evidence indicates that the Cape Newenham/Togiak region of southwestern Alaska has been continuously occupied for at least 2,000 years. One site at Security Cove shows evidence of possible human occupancy dating back 4,000 to 5,000 years. For more on the history of people in southwest Alaska, click here.

Prior to 1969, the area that was to become Togiak National Wildlife Refuge was public land managed by the Bureau of Land Management. In 1969, some of these lands were set aside as the Cape Newenham National Wildlife Refuge. In 1980, under the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act (ANILCA), the 265,000 acre Cape Newenham Refuge was expanded and renamed, becoming the 4.7 million acre Togiak National Wildlife Refuge. The northern 2.3 million acres of the refuge are designated as a Wilderness Area. To view a timetable of the development of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the National Wildlife Refuge System, and the Togiak Refuge, click here.