Whether you wield a smartphone or a zoom lens, you’ll find photo-worthy subjects at national wildlife refuges and national fish hatcheries. Wildlife photography is a priority public use on national wildlife refuges, so you’ll find wildlife drives and blinds and overlooks to help you get the images you’re after.

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A man using a large video camera standing on a beach filming a crab in the water
The EXPLORE Act (Public Law 118-234), enacted in January 2025, includes new permitting and fee requirements for filming and photography participants. These requirements are in Section 125 of the Act, which how the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service manages filming, still photography, and audio...
Pronghorn graze in golden light at sunrise at Seedskadee National Wildlife Refuge.
Follow these tips from experts to capture great photos of nature and wildlife.
A woman aims her camera at birds through a photography blind at Ankeny National Wildlife Refuge in Oregon.
These national wildlife refuges are among those with photography blinds or wildlife observation blinds.

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