McNary National Wildlife Refuge (Wash. and Or.)
Enlarge text Shrink text- McNary National Wildlife refuge, concept management plan ... 1999:t.p. (McNary National Wildlife Refuge) p. 2 (outline map of Oregon and Washington, with the east-central area of their common boundary highlighted) p. 5 (Umatilla, Or.; and Burbank, Wash.)
- GNIS, WA(McNary National Wildlife Refuge; park; 46⁰11ʹ42ʺN, 118⁰56ʹ42ʺW)
- McNary National Wildlife Refuge, via Audubon Online, by National Audubon Society, Inc., May 27, 1999(McNary Wildlife Refuge is part of the Mid-Columbia River Refuge Complex in the area of Washington State where the Snake joins the Columbia River; the Refuge contains ponds because the water table surfaced in the low areas when water backed up after completion of the McNary dam which spans the Columbia River as it bends westward to become the border between Oregon and Washington; a piece of land less than a quarter of a mile wide, the marsh hunkers between a residential area perched on its northern border and a U.S. two-lane highway on the south)
- National wildlife refuges(Oregon: McNary NWR; mailing address, Umatilla, OR; Washington: McNary NWR; mailing address, Umatilla, OR)
McNary National Wildlife Refuge is a wildlife preserve, one of the national wildlife refuges operated by the United States Fish and Wildlife Service. Extending along the east bank of the Columbia River in southeastern Washington, from the confluence of the Snake River to the mouth of the Walla Walla River, and downstream into Oregon, McNary NWR is located in rural Burbank, but very close to the rapid development of the Tri-Cities (Kennewick, Pasco and Richland). In fact, the refuge meets the definition of an "urban refuge." Few areas in North America support waterfowl populations in the extraordinary numbers found here. There are spectacular concentrations of Canada geese, mallards, and other waterfowl. More than half the mallards in the Pacific Flyway overwinter at some time in this portion of the Columbia River Basin. The refuge encompasses backwater sloughs, shrub-steppe uplands, irrigated farmlands, river islands, delta mudflats, and riparian areas. Particularly important to Canada geese, mallards, and wigeons, as well as shorebirds and wading birds, the refuge also includes wetlands and shoreline bays that serve as an important nursery for developing fall chinook salmon. Other waterfowl species using the refuge include green-winged teal, shoveler, canvasback, ring-necked ducks, and lesser scaups. Birds, including bald eagles and peregrine falcons, are found here, as are thousands of colonial nesting water birds using river islands for safe nesting.
Read more on Wikipedia >