Ways to Get Involved

   

Volunteering

If you are interested in volunteering some of your time to refuges, please contact the refuge manager (Brian Wehausen) for more details on the opportunities available.

Discover for yourself what tens of thousands of volunteers have learned: Volunteering for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is fun and rewarding in many ways. Master new skills. Meet new friends. Enjoy a sense of accomplishment from doing your part to further wildlife conservation for the pleasure of generations to follow. Check out our station's latest volunteer opportunities on volunteer.gov or contact the refuge manager for more details.

Youth Internships, Fellowships, and Volunteer Opportunities 

Open the door to a potentially life-changing experience. If you land a student internship, a fellowship or a volunteer opportunity at a national wildlife refuge national wildlife refuge
A national wildlife refuge is typically a contiguous area of land and water managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service  for the conservation and, where appropriate, restoration of fish, wildlife and plant resources and their habitats for the benefit of present and future generations of Americans.

Learn more about national wildlife refuge
, fish hatchery or other U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service site, you’re destined to come away with new insights and excitement about conservation.  The refuge has worked closely with the Student Conservation Association and the Great Basin Institute in the last few years and have sponsored one to two interns per year.

Our Partners

Nature does not recognize human-made boundaries. In order to conserve our natural and cultural resources effectively, we must work with others to bridge these boundaries. Partnerships foster creative solutions to challenging situations and often the results are greater than the sum of the parts. Learn more about our local partners.

Outreach

The best way to get involved with Camas NWR is through habitat work and citizen science work done through Friends of Camas NWR and the Idaho Falls Chapter of Master Naturalists.