Pacific Flyway Council
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Coordinated Management
The Pacific Flyway Council is an administrative body that forges cooperation among public wildlife agencies for the purpose of protecting and conserving migratory birds in western North America. The Council is composed of the director or an appointee from the public wildlife agency in each state and province in the western United States, Canada, and Mexico.

Migratory birds use four major migratory routes (Pacific, Central, Mississippi, and Atlantic flyways) in North America. Because of the unique biological characteristics and relative number of hunters in these regions, state and federal wildlife agencies adopted the flyway structure for administering migratory bird resources within the United States. Each flyway has its own council.

Flyway councils have responsibilities in the annual process of setting migratory bird policy and regulations within the United States and conduct and contribute to migratory bird research and management throughout the United States, Canada, and Mexico.

The Pacific Flyway Council has both a game and nongame migratory bird technical committee that provides biological advice to the council. The technical committees are each composed of one biologist from the public wildlife agency in each state and province in the western United States, Canada, and Mexico.

In the U.S., the Pacific Flyway includes Alaska, Arizona, California, Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Utah, Washington, and those portions of Colorado, Montana, New Mexico, and Wyoming west of the Continental Divide.

Canada goose flying

Next Meeting
March 17, 2009
Arlington, Virginia
Marriott Crystal Gateway
(703) 920-3230

This meeting is in association with the 74th North American Wildlife and Natural Resources Conference

Pacific States
Alaska
Arizona
California
Colorado
Idaho
Montana
Nevada
New Mexico
Oregon
Utah
Washington
Wyoming


Harlequin duck
Harlequin duck (Photo by J. Hyde).

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