Conserve Skip to Main Content
Map Grid View List View Article View
  • How to Use the Strategy Website
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Download Chapters
  • Citation
  • Contact Us
  • Help Conserve Wildlife
  • Overview
    • Background
    • How To Use the Strategy
    • Funding, Implementation, and Review
    • Acknowledgements
  • Key Conservation Issues
    • Climate Change
    • Land Use Changes
    • Invasive Species
    • Disruption of Disturbance Regimes
    • Barriers to Animal Movement
    • Water Quality and Quantity
    • Challenges and Opportunities for Private Landowners to Initiate Conservation Actions
  • Ecoregions
    • Blue Mountains
    • Coast Range
    • Columbia Plateau
    • East Cascades
    • Klamath Mountains
    • Northern Basin and Range
    • West Cascades
    • Willamette Valley
    • Nearshore
  • Conservation Opportunity Areas
    • COA Overview
    • COA Methodology
  • Strategy Habitats
    • Aspen Woodlands
    • Coastal Dunes
    • Estuaries
    • Flowing Water and Riparian Habitats
    • Grasslands
    • Late Successional Mixed Conifer Forests
    • Natural Lakes
    • Oak Woodlands
    • Ponderosa Pine Woodlands
    • Sagebrush Habitats
    • Wetlands
    • Summary by Ecoregion
    • Specialized and Local Habitats
    • Habitat Data Gaps
  • Strategy Species
    • Amphibians
    • Birds
    • Mammals
    • Reptiles
    • Fish
    • Invertebrates
    • Plants and Algae
    • Methods for Determining Strategy Species
    • Species Data Gaps
    • Animal Concentrations
    • Fish and Wildlife Diseases
  • Monitoring
  • Conservation Toolbox
    • Outreach, Education, and Engagement
    • Voluntary Conservation Programs
    • Conservation in Urban Areas
    • Planning and Regulatory Framework
    • General References
  • Oregon Nearshore Strategy
    • Nearshore Strategy Context
    • Strategy Development
    • Coastal Communities
    • Nearshore Species
    • Nearshore Habitats
      • >> Neritic (Open water)
      • >> Subtidal soft bottom
      • >> Rocky subtidal
      • >> Sandy Beaches
      • >> Rocky intertidal
      • >> Estuaries
    • Factors affecting Strategy Species and Habitats
    • Research and Monitoring
    • Nearshore Recommendations
    • Nearshore Conclusions
    • Nearshore Appendices
    • Acknowledgements and References
Oregon Conservation Strategy

Mammals

Home > Strategy Species > Mammals

There are 29 mammals identified as Strategy Species in the Oregon Conservation Strategy.

 

American Pika

Ochotona princeps

California Myotis on tree

California Myotis

Myotis californicus

Columbian White-tailed Deer

Odocoileus virginianus leucurus

Fisher

Pekania pennanti

Fringed Myotis

Myotis thysanodes

Gray Whale

Eschrichtius robustus

Gray Wolf

Canis lupus

Harbor Porpoise

Phocoena phocoena

Hoary Bat

Lasiurus cinereus

Killer Whale

Orcinus orca

Kit Fox

Vulpes macrotis

Long-legged Myotis

Myotis volans

Northern Elephant Seal

Mirounga angustirostris

Pacific Harbor Seal

Phoca vitulina

Pacific Marten

Martes caurina

Pallid Bat

Antrozous pallidus

Pygmy Rabbit

Brachylagus idahoensis

Red Tree Vole

Arborimus longicaudus

Ringtail

Ringtail

Bassariscus astutus

Rocky Mountain Bighorn Sheep

Ovis canadensis canadensis

Sierra Nevada Red Fox

Sierra Nevada Red Fox

Vulpes vulpes necator

Silver-haired Bat

Lasionycteris noctivagans

Spotted Bat

Euderma maculatum

Steller Sea Lion

Eumetopias jubatus

Townsend's Big-eared Bat

Townsend’s Big-eared Bat

Corynorhinus townsendii

Washington Ground Squirrel

Urocitellus washingtoni

Western Gray Squirrel

Sciurus griseus

White-tailed Jackrabbit

Lepus townsendii

Wolverine

Wolverine

Gulo gulo

All information on this website is considered DRAFT pending USFWS approval.