Mid-Columbia River National Wildlife Refuge Complex
Mid-Columbia River National Wildlife Refuge Complex is a group of protected areas in the U.S. states of Oregon and Washington. Headquartered in Burbank, Washington, its administrators manage seven national wildlife refuges (NWR)s and one national monument on or near the Columbia River. They are Cold Springs, Columbia, Conboy Lake, McKay Creek, McNary, Toppenish and Umatilla NWRs and Hanford Reach National Monument.[1]
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- Admiralty Inlet
- Badger Gulch
- Bald Hill
- Barker Mountain
- Bone River
- Camas Meadows
- Carlisle Bog
- Castle Rock
- Charley Creek
- Chehalis River Surge Plain
- Chopaka Mountain
- Clearwater Bogs
- Cleveland Shrub Steppe
- Columbia Falls
- Columbia Hills
- Cypress Highlands
- Dabob Bay
- Dailey Prairie
- Davis Canyon
- Entiat Slopes
- Goose Island
- Gunpowder Island
- Hamma Hamma Balds
- Ink Blot
- Kahlotus Ridgetop
- Kennedy Creek
- Kings Lake Bog
- Kitsap Forest
- Lacamas Prairie Natural Area
- Little Pend Oreille River
- Marcellus Shrub Steppe
- Methow Rapids
- Mima Mounds
- Monte Cristo
- Niawiakum River
- North Bay
- Oak Patch
- Olivine Bridge
- Pinecroft
- Point Doughty
- Riverside Breaks
- Rocky Prairie
- Sand Island
- Schumacher Creek
- Selah Cliffs
- Skagit Bald Eagle
- Skookum Inlet
- Snoqualmie Bog
- Spring Creek Canyon
- Trout Lake
- The Two-Steppe
- Upper Dry Gulch
- Washougal Oaks Natural Area
- Whitcomb Flats
- Willapa Divide
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Coordinates: 46°12′03.00″N 118°59′38.99″W / 46.2008333°N 118.9941639°W / 46.2008333; -118.9941639 (Mid-Columbia River National Wildlife Refuge Complex headquarters)