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Quick Links
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What is an Ecoregion?Washington is a large and diverse state, with wet and dry forests, prairies and sagebrush steppe, high country and low, lakes and rivers, and a long coastline. It also has many areas modified to accommodate human populations such as cities and towns and farms and ranches. Many birds are widely distributed, while others are found principally or exclusively in one or several of its ten ecoregions.
BirdWeb has adopted the ecoregional boundaries defined by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, with minor modifications by scientists of the Natural Heritage Program of the Washington State Department of Natural Resources and their planning partners, including The Nature Conservancy and the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. Portions of nine terrestrial ecoregions occur within Washington's borders. BirdWeb has added a tenth, Oceanic ecoregion for waters offshore in the Pacific.
* State of Washington Natural Heritage Plan. 2003. |
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©2005-2008 Seattle Audubon Society
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