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Features

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    For Wildlife & You

    The refuge uses many different tools and actively manages these lands for the benefit of wildlife. Learn how!

    Resource Management

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    Where Wildlife Comes First

    National Wildlife Refuges are managed for wildlife and habitat and to ensure future generations will always have wild places to explore!

    Wildlife and Habitat

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    Get a closer look!

    Get up close and personal with some of the refuge's wild residents and the habitat they depend upon.

    Multimedia Gallery

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    Enjoy, Explore, Learn!

    Boardwalks, trails, auto tour routes and blinds offer many opportunities to get outside and enjoy the refuge.

    Visitor Activities

 

Companion Refuges

Brazoria National Wildlife is part of the Texas Mid-coast Refuge Complex, which also includes San Bernard and Big Boggy Refuges. For more information on the three refuges, contact the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

Contact Information

 

Protecting Native Ecosystems

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Chinese tallow is an exotic tree that causes large-scale damage to the refuge's wetland and prairie ecosystems, as well as the wildlife that depend on the coastal habitat. The exotic tree quickly invades an area and, because it did not evolve here, has no natural predators. Trying to eliminate this and other exotic species is a management priority of the Brazoria National Wildlife Refuge and the National Wildlife Refuge System.

Chinese Tallow

About the NWRS

National Wildlife Refuge System

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The National Wildlife Refuge System, within the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, manages a national network of lands and waters set aside to conserve America’s fish, wildlife, and plants.

Learn more about the NWRS  

Follow NWRS Online

 

 

Going Wild!

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The Refuge Junior Naturalist program provides opportunities for children 10-12 years of age to work with refuge staff and biologists on projects designed to introduce them to a career in natural resources. Participants learn basic naturalist skills, which are then applied to actual wildlife conservation projects, including sea turtle patrols, tree planting, insect collection and keeping a nature journal.

Refuge Junior Naturalist
Page Photo Credits — All photos courtesy of USFWS unless otherwise noted.
Last Updated: Oct 11, 2016
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