Moses Coulee & Beezley Hills

 

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bat

Research on Washington’s Bats
Bats, especially evening bats, remain mysterious in many ways. At Moses Coulee, researchers practice the latest techniques to study bats.
See Great Photos Here!


Go Deeper

Science
Conservation Action Planning

Land Acquisitions
Learn about a recent land acquisition at Moses Coulee as we work to knit together this precious shrub-steppe landscape.

Moses Coulee Factsheet
Download a fact sheet for the Moses Coulee/Beezley Hills Preserve (.pdf, 213 kb)

Preserve Visitation Guidelines
The Nature Conservancy's preserves are private properties, managed to protect native species and ecosystems. Please review these guidelines before your visit.

Help protect your Washington

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The success of The Nature Conservancy in Washington relies on the support of people like you.

The Nature Conservancy’s largest preserves in Washington are on the spectacular Columbia Plateau. Here we are protecting and restoring the fabled sagebrush country of wide-open skies, dramatic geology and amazing desert species.

With its Ice Age floodcarved, steep-walled coulees, its pothole lakes, dunes, haystack boulders, waterfalls and scablands—this area is home to a rich and fragile mosaic of rare living things. Between the shrubs and grasses grow a profusion of wildflowers, including sulfur lupine and the vibrant bitterroot, long a favorite food harvested by native peoples. Totaling more than 30,000 acres, The Nature Conservancy’s Moses Coulee/Beezley Hills Preserve is an especially rich and diverse example of Washington’s shrub-steppe.

Conservation Actions:

Nearly a third of Washington’s entire land mass was historically comprised of the shrub-steppe. Today, more than two-thirds of our shrub-steppe has been lost to agriculture or urban development. The Conservancy is taking the following actions to ensure the long-term conservation of this habitat and its resident species:

  • Partnering with public and private landowners to advance the long-term conservation of 400,000 acres of functional shrub-steppe by identifying lands that connect existing shrub-steppe.
     
  • Collaborating with management and regulatory agencies, farmers and ranchers to ensure that appropriate habitat, knowledge and management capacity are available to support viable populations of sage grouse, Columbia sharp-tailed grouse and pygmy rabbits.
     
  • Providing habitat for 14 of the 15 bat species reported in Washington, the Moses Coulee Preserve is known as the single most important location for this key group of animals in the state. Working with partners, researchers and volunteers to create an inventory and monitoring program to gain the knowledge needed to ensure that appropriate conditions exist and support the long-term conservation of Washington’s bat species. 

Visiting Moses Coulee and the Beezley Hills

Moses Coulee and the Beezley Hills offer visitors great opportunities to explore year round and experience the best of Washington’s sagebrush country.

Please be gentle! Shrub-steppe may look tough, but its fragile soil crust is easily damaged, so be sure to stay on trails when you visit the area.