Covering 74 million acres, the Columbia Plateau stretches across
the sagebrush steppe of southern Idaho, connecting the Columbia Basin
of eastern Washington and Oregon to the northern Great Basin of Nevada,
Utah and California. Essentially the Plateau is a broad expanse of
sagebrush covered volcanic valleys, punctuated by isolated mountain
ranges and the dramatic river systems of the Snake, Owyhee, Boise,
and Columbia Rivers. Nearly half of the Columbia Plateau ecoregion is owned by the U.S. federal government, much of which is managed by the Bureau of Land Management. Valley bottomlands, stream drainages and arable lands are all largely in private ownership. Land conversion, mostly to foster intensive agriculture, has occurred to a considerable extent on private lands. Additional information on this ecoregion is available from the Washington Biodiversity Council.
Assessment Summary:
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