White Tern / Photo by Brian Peck/USFWS |
- The Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, an important site for Arctic breeding birds, is once again under threat from proposed oil drilling, as it was for much of the Bush administration. A look at Prudhoe Bay shows that oil infrastructure would be far more intrusive than its supporters claim.
- The administration also wants to build a road through the Izembek Wilderness, another important area for breeding birds.
- Exposure to even small amounts of oil from the Deepwater Horizon spill made birds sick.
- Canada Warblers tend to breed near other members of their species, so preventing habitat loss and degradation is important to avoid overcrowding.
- Climate change is reducing the food available to seabirds like Nazca Boobies that nest on the Galapagos Islands.
- A new paper proposes a method for estimating the eastern population of Golden Eagles using hawk watch data from the Kittatinny Ridge. The method produced a total of 1,350 Golden Eagles migrating along the ridge each year in the first decade of this century.
- The reasons for the long-term decline of Red-headed Woodpecker populations is unclear, but even in normal conditions, they go through boom and bust cycles.
- A paper argues that harmful effects of geolocators on Cerulean Warblers may be due to the marking method rather than the weight of the geolocator.
- When Australia's inland deserts flood with temporary lakes, Banded Stilts fly thousands of miles to reach them and lay eggs there to take advantage of brine shrimp hatching.
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- Simon Barnes: How to eat a meal as tall as yourself
- Mia McPherson's On The Wing Photography: White-crowned Sparrow Juvenile Feeding On Wild Sunflower Seeds
- The Speckled Hatchback: Post #120 - Pelagic Bird Photo Showcase and Pelagic Photography Tips/Tutorial
- Backyard and Beyond: The Canary on the Windshield
- The Meadowlands Nature Blog: Don Torino’s Life in the Meadowlands: Get Your Backyard Ready for Winter Birds
- Stokes Birding Blog: How to ID and Attract Sparrows at Your Bird Feeder Now!
- 10,000 Birds: Searching for the Puerto Rican Parrot
- Avian Hybrids: More Species Than Meets the Eye: A Genetic Look at the Red-eyed Vireo Complex
- A new study suggests that methane emissions from Alberta's tar sands mines are much greater than estimated.
- In the aftermath of Hurricane Maria, much of Puerto Rico's drinking water remains contaminated by sewage and other pollutants.
- The insects trapped in routine surveys in German nature reserves have fallen by close to 80% in the last three decades.
- While insect populations are declining, the bats that eat them in North America are suffering from White Nose Syndrome.
- A new bill threatens to limit a president's ability to protect lands for conservation purposes under the Antiquities Act.
- Climate change may bring even more extreme weather to California in the coming decades.
- The Trump administration has announced US withdrawal from the Paris climate agreement but will still send representatives to negotiations on its implementation.
- Public lands are popular but would benefit from changes to increase their accessibility to all of the public.
- Turkey returned 7,500 wild frogs to the wetlands where they were captured by poachers.
- Ireland and other European countries need to prepare for more storms like Hurricane Ophelia because of climate change.
- The UK's bill to withdraw from the EU leaves out important elements of European environmental law.