|

Oregon
Islands | Cape
Meares | Three
Arch Rocks | Nestucca
Bay | Siletz
Bay | Bandon
Marsh
Welcome to the Oregon Coast National Wildlife Refuge Complex Home Page!
With its remarkable vistas and superb recreational opportunities, the Oregon coast attracts millions of visitors each year. However, few are aware of the National Wildlife Refuges that span 320 miles of the rugged coastline. The Oregon Coast National Wildlife Refuge Complex comprises six National Wildlife Refuges protecting a variety of coastal habitats.
Stretching from Tillamook Head south to the California border,
three of the refuges are marine and three are estuarine.The marine
refuges (Oregon Islands,
Cape Meares, Three
Arch Rocks) protect coastal rocks, reefs, islands and several
headland areas. These habitats support some of the most important seabird
nesting colonies in the United States. Over a million seabirds,
including common murres, tufted puffins, cormorants, and storm-petrels
nest here. Coastal rocks provide breeding and haul-out sites for
harbor seals and Steller and California sea lions. These pinnipeds
create quite a spectacle during the spring breeding season when
hundreds haul their massive blubbery bodies onto the safety of
the rocks to mate.
The three estuarine refuges (Nestucca
Bay, Siletz Bay, Bandon
Marsh) preserve a very different, but equally valuable, habitat.
These habitats include saltmarsh, brackish marsh, riparian wetlands
and wooded uplands. They offer sanctuary to a diverse array of
fish and wildlife including waterfowl, shorebirds, raptors, small
mammals, amphibians and anadromous fish.
 |
To find some of the best places to observe wildlife on the Oregon Coast, view our Wildlife Watching Map (443 KB). |
|
|