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Oregon Department Of Fish And Wildlife
- Oregon

Principal Locations
  1. Bend
  2. City of The Dalles
  3. Corvallis
  4. Eugene
  5. Klamath Falls
  6. Medford
  7. Portland
  8. Salem

Resources


Oregon Department Of Fish And Wildlife



EFW Home
Learn how BPA is partnering with the Nez Perce Tribe, the Confederated Tribes of the Umatilla Indian Reservation, the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the U.S. Forest Service to conserve ESA listed salmon on the Grande Ronde and Imnaha rivers. ...

Today, BPA and its partners operating the Federal Columbia River Power System (FCRPS) are working diligently to protect and enhance our environmental, fish, and wildlife values, and ensure these qualities for future generations. ... [Read More]

State/Territorial Fish and Wildlife Offices
The US Fish and Wildlife Service works in partnership with many organizations and individuals. Fish and wildlife conservation requires coordinated efforts by the states and the territories, as well as private landowners, tribes, and other countries besides the Unites States. The list below provides a starting point for finding the state agencies that manage fish and wildlife resources. ...

Also, the International Association of Fish and Wildlife Agencies maintains a list of natural resources agencies for states, provinces, and territories . For hunting and fishing licenses , see the licensing page maintained by Automated Wildlife Data Systems . [For tribal contacts, please see the Fish & Wildlife Resource Tribes of the United States from the Bureau of Indian Affairs.] ... [Read More]

WDFW - Fish & Wildlife Science
David Hays is an endangered species specialist with the WDFW Wildlife Program. He currently coordinates recovery efforts for the pygmy rabbit. David has worked as a conservation biologist and endangered species biologist with WDFW since 1989. He has been involved in developing conservation strategies for the marbled murrelet and spotted owl, among other species. He served on the Science Advisory Group for the DNR Habitat Conservation Plan in Washington, on the Timber Advisory Group for Gov. Booth Gardner, and served as a scientific advisor to the Washington Forest Practices Board for development of spotted owl regulations on state and private land. He was part of a team that developed the Draft Recovery Plan for the Northern Spotted Owl and the Conservation Strategy for the Northern Spotted Owl. He has published scientific papers on spotted owls and northern goshawks, has written WDFW status reports and recovery plans for sage grouse, sharp-tailed grouse, western pond turtle, leopard ... [Read More]

State of Oregon: A - Z Listing
Fish And Wildlife Department ...

State Lands, Department of ...

Engineering And Land Surveying, Board Of Examiners For ... [Read More]

Bonneville Power Administration
Bonneville Power Administration initial page to help ensure ADA, browser, monitor resolution and other requirements are met in order to allow the public to be directed to the best screen and browser feature enabled page in order to access BPA web site information to the fullest extent possible. ...

Providing low-cost, reliable electricity to the people and businesses of the Pacific Northwest. The main administrative building of BPA is located in Portland, Oregon USA. Browser Detection Page ... [Read More]

WDFW -- Habitat Science
The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife will issue a Request for Qualifications and Quotations (RFQQ) to: Identify and select a consultant that will develop and implement an Oiled Wildlife Rescue/Response/Rehabilitation training program for selected individuals and groups throughout the state. The successful consultant will be contracted to develop and provide "pre-spill" basic, advanced, and annual refresher training, in Oiled Wildlife Rescue/ Response/Rehabilitation during oil spills. ... [Read More]

Welcome to Deer Flat National Wildlife Refuge
Deer Flat, founded by President Teddy Roosevelt on February 25, 1909, is one of the oldest refuges in the National Wildlife Refuge System , which now includes 540 refuges. The NWRS celebrated it's centennial in March of 2003. Managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service , the System preserves a network of lands and waters set aside for the conservation and management of the nation's fish, wildlife, and plant resources for the benefit of present and future generations. ... [Read More]

WDFW -- Species of Concern (Threatened & Endangered Species)
Species of Concern in Washington include all State Endangered, Threatened, Sensitive, and Candidate species. Species of Concern also include Federal Endangered, Threatened, and Candidate fish stocks. Species of Concern are also considered priority species . ...

© 1997-2004 Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife ...

WAC 232-12-297: Endangered, threatened, and sensitive wildlife species classification ... [Read More]

Oregon Coast National Wildlife Refuge Complex: Links
Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife ...

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Environmental Education page ...

National Fish and Wildlife Foundation ... [Read More]

WDFW - Fish & Wildlife Science
Dan L. Ayres is a fisheries biologist who leads the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife's coastal shellfish unit based in Montesano and Willapa Bay. He manages Washington's razor clam fishery and oversees the unit's work managing the coastal Dungeness crab, pink shrimp and spot prawn fisheries, the Willapa Bay oyster reserves and research projects in Willapa Bay. ...

That is just one of many questions Trainer and fellow scientists at the NWFSC and the University of Washington School of Oceanography hope to answer during the course of a five-year study funded through the federal Ecology and Oceanography of Harmful Algal Blooms program at NOAA. Together with UW oceanography professor Barbara Hickey, Trainer will lead six three-week research cruises to study the physiology, toxicology, ecology and oceanography of Pseudo-nitzschia and its relationship with the Juan de Fuca eddy. Using measuring instruments attached to fixed and "drifter" buoys, the scientists will attempt to determine what makes the eddy so hospitable for toxic algae, what causes the production and release of domoic acid and how that acid is transported from the eddy to shellfish beds. ... [Read More]


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