Cape Meares National Wildlife Refuge

{{Short description|Wildlife refuge in Oregon, United States}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2025}}

{{Infobox protected area

| name = Cape Meares National Wildlife Refuge

| iucn_category = IV

| photo = Beautiful cape meares.jpg

| photo_caption = Cape Meares as seen from nearby beach

| map = Oregon#USA

| map_width = 208

| location = Tillamook County, Oregon, USA

| nearest_city = Cape Meares

| coordinates = {{coord|45.4873248|N|123.9637426|W|region:US-OR+source:gnis|notes={{cite gnis|1155502|Cape Meares National Wildlife Refuge}}|display=inline, title}}

| area = {{convert|138.51|acres|0}} {{FWS area|2009}}

| established = 1938

| visitation_num =

| visitation_year =

| governing_body = U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

| website = [http://www.fws.gov/refuge/cape_meares/ Cape Meares NWR]

}}

File:View - Cape Meares National Wildlife Refuge.jpg

Cape Meares National Wildlife Refuge is a National Wildlife Refuge of the Oregon Coast. It is one of six National Wildlife Refuges in the Oregon Coast National Wildlife Refuge Complex. Located on Cape Meares, the refuge was established in 1938 to protect a remnant of coastal old-growth forest and the surrounding habitat used by breeding seabirds.{{cite web |title=New Champion Sitka Spruce at Cape Meares National Wildlife Refuge |publisher=U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service |url=http://www.ascendingthegiants.com/media/Cape_Meares_Sitka_Spruce_PR%5B1%5D.pdf |access-date=2008-12-21 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110707172800/http://www.ascendingthegiants.com/media/Cape_Meares_Sitka_Spruce_PR%5B1%5D.pdf |archive-date=2011-07-07 |url-status=dead }} The area provides a home for a threatened bird species, the marbled murrelets. Peregrine falcons, once at the brink of extinction, have nested here since 1987.{{cite web |title=Cape Meares National Wildlife Refuge Profile |publisher=U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service |url=http://www.fws.gov/refuges/profiles/index.cfm?id=13593}} The refuge, with the exception of the Oregon Coast Trail, was designated a Research Natural Area in 1987.

The Cape Meares Light, which marked the cape at night from 1890 until 1963, is now open to the public. Three Arch Rocks National Wildlife Refuge and Oregon Islands National Wildlife Refuge are easily seen from the cape. It is the only point in the United States from which three refuges can be seen at the same time.{{cite web |url=http://www.fws.gov/oregoncoast/capemeares/index.htm |title=Cape Meares National Wildlife Refuge |publisher=U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service}}

Wildlife viewing

The Oregon Coast Trail passes through the center of this headland and interpretive displays along the trail describe the varied wildlife. From this trail, it is possible to see migrating gray whales, three species of scoters, western grebes, and common loons. A wildlife viewing deck, part of the Cape Meares State Scenic Viewpoint, provides views of the refuge's sea cliffs and inshore islands. In season, visitors can see the aerie of a nesting peregrine falcon pair. Each spring thousands of seabirds return to nest on the cliffs. Species that can be seen are brants, pelagic cormorants, common murres, tufted puffins, pigeon guillemots, western gulls, and black oystercatchers. This state park has {{convert|3|mi}} of hiking trails and a {{convert|1|mi|adj=on}} walking trail through the forest of sitka spruce and western hemlock.{{cite web |title=Cape Meares State Scenic Viewpoint |publisher=Oregon Parks and Recreation Department |url=http://www.oregonstateparks.org/park_181.php}}

The Cape Meares Giant

Some of the trees on the refuge are hundreds of years old and more than {{convert|200|ft|0}} tall. The Cape Meares Giant, a sitka spruce, is of special interest. After the Great Coastal Gale of 2007 killed the Klootchy Creek Giant, once considered the largest sitka spruce in the world,{{cite web |title=Sitka Spruce Oregon Heritage Tree Site |publisher=Clatsop County, Oregon |url=https://www.co.clatsop.or.us/parks/page/klootchy-creek-sitka-spruce-giant |access-date=2016-09-22}} the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) granted a special use permit to Ascending the Giants, a Portland based organization, which allowed them to climb and measure the Cape Meares Giant. Based on the results, the FWS issued a press release in February 2008 that announced that the tree is the largest known Sitka spruce in the state and that it was designated an Oregon Heritage Tree. Oregon's actual largest Sitka Spruce, using a point system, is Falcon's Tower, discovered and measured by Certified Arborist M. D. Vaden. Cape Meares Giant Spruce had only 743 points, whereas Falcon's Tower was documented at 750 points by M. D. Vaden.{{cite web |title=Sitka Spruce at the Oregon Coast |publisher=M. D. Vaden |url=http://www.mdvaden.com/klootchy_spruce.shtml |access-date=2016-09-22}} Falcon's Tower is in Oswald West State Park, between Cannon Beach and Manzanita, Oregon.{{cite web |title=M. D. Vaden, Arborist ~ News and Tree Discovery |publisher=M. D. Vaden |url=http://www.mdvaden.com/news.shtml |access-date=2016-09-22}}

See also

{{Commons category|Cape Meares National Wildlife Refuge}}

References

{{reflist}}

{{Protected areas of Oregon}}

{{National Wildlife Refuges of the United States}}

{{authority control}}

Category:National Wildlife Refuges in Oregon

Category:Protected areas of Tillamook County, Oregon

Category:1938 establishments in Oregon