Explore what's happening across the Audubon Network Join us in Harrisburg to voice your support for designating the Scarlet Tanager as the state migratory bird. Thanks to Rep. Mandy Steele, House Bill ...
As a student at Smith College, Bailey founded one of the first Audubon societies in 1886. A recent graduate who led the ...
How do you get people excited about birds? Apparently the answer hasn't changed all that much in more than a century.
Four tips that stand the test of time from conservation icon Florence Merriam Bailey, who helped popularize birding as a ...
Dancing is the main event at powwows, inter-tribal celebrations filled with Indigenous food and art. Styles and inspiration ...
Depending on your teenage years, the mere mention of superlatives could either bring back fond memories or resurrect deeply ...
The future of the Greater Sage-Grouse, and the health of the broader sagebrush ecosystem, has long been shaped by land-use decisions spread across millions of acres of the American West. In January ...
Listen to the fluted chorus of a Wood Thrush, a beautiful song known to inspire artists and enliven eastern forests each summer. Now hear the gruff squawk of an American Crow. Which is the songbird?
BALTIMORE—A new report from the National Audubon Society presents the first landscape-scale restoration plan for Maryland’s remaining 172,000 acres of salt marsh—habitat vital to imperiled birds, ...
It is with a heavy heart that we share the sad news that Dr. Sandy DeSimone, our Director of Research, Education, and Land Management at Starr Ranch Sanctuary, recently passed away. Our deepest ...
An owl heard is as good as an owl seen. At least, that's what you can tell yourself the next time you eavesdrop on one but can't actually spot it (they are great at camouflage). These beloved raptors ...
In the avian symphony of spring, the Ruffed Grouse plays the timpani. At dawn he takes the stage on a log, stump, or boulder. Bracing himself with his tail, he begins ...