UNITED STATES
Use our Oregon Tabletop Map to identify Burns, Malheur Lake, and the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge.
Teachers, scroll down for a quick list of key resources in our Teachers’ Toolkit.

Photograph by Cacophony, courtesy Wikimedia. CC-BY-SA-3.0
Discussion Ideas
- Protesters have occupied Malheur National Wildlife Refuge. What is a wildlife refuge?
- Wildlife refuges are public lands and waters set aside to conserve fish, wildlife, and plants in the United States.
- The Malheur National Wildlife Refuge is operated by the federal government. What does this mean?
- It means an agency of the national government, not state or local authorities, determine most policies on the land. The federal agency that controls wildlife refuges is the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service.
- What are other examples of federal “public lands”?
- What does the federal government do with public lands?
- According to the great National Geographic article, “some of it is protected as wilderness or park land but much of it is used for grazing, logging, hunting, fishing, and other purposes.”
- Do other states have National Wildlife Refuges?
- Are there any National Wildlife Refuges in your area?
- Why was the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge established? Read through the fantastic Nat Geo article for some help.
- The refuge in eastern Oregon was established in 1908 by President Theodore Roosevelt to protect waterfowl, such as ducks and ibises, many of which were being wiped out for the feather trade.

Map by National Geographic
- The conflict in Oregon is part of a longstanding controversy about land use in the American West. Why do you think this debate is mostly limited to the western part of the country? Take a look at the great Nat Geo map above for some help.
- The federal government controls much, much more land in the West than the East. According to Nat Geo, only “ten [Eastern] states have less than two percent of land controlled by the federal government. In contrast, 84.5 percent of land in Nevada is controlled by the feds. Oregon is 53.1 percent federal controlled. Idaho, Arizona, New Mexico, and California aren’t far behind, and Utah is even higher at 57.4 percent.”
- Why do some people object to federal control of land?
- According to Nat Geo, “In Facebook messages, the protesters say they want the federal government to turn over management of lands to local control. [Standoff leader] Ryan Bundy told the AP that they would like to see more land used ‘for ranching, logging, mining and recreation’ and free of federal oversight.”
TEACHERS’ TOOLKIT
Nat Geo: Why Federal Lands Are So Wildly Controversial in the West
Nat Geo: Oregon Tabletop Map
Nat Geo: What is ranching?
U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service: Malheur National Wildlife Refuge
U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service: Find a Refuge by Zip Code