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The Joe family farm practices a land ethic that has brought in the birds, and now a burgeoning side business that is bringing in birders to the Black Belt of Alabama.


New research out of the Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest shows that migratory songbirds use their songs to equally allocate breeding territories amongst themselves.


A simple series of experiments looked into why Red-breasted Nuthatches use sticky conifer resin to defend against nest predators and competitors.


Evidence from blood tests taken at The Raptor Center at the University of Minnesota shows that some birds of prey are beating the aggressive avian influenza virus.


From the Spring 2026 issue of Living Bird magazine. Subscribe now. Spring is here! And with it, the return of old friends: a familiar song at dawn, or a flash... Read more »


From the Spring 2026 issue of Living Bird magazine. Subscribe now. While Doug Sheerer was overseeing construction on Cornell University’s Meinig Fieldhouse during the spring of 2025, he had a... Read more »


From the Spring 2026 issue of Living Bird magazine. Subscribe now. Dark-eyed Juncos are known to scavenge across the University of California, Los Angeles, campus year-round, thriving on food and... Read more »


From the Spring 2026 issue of Living Bird magazine. Subscribe now. Warbling Vireos are easy to overlook—small, olive-gray songbirds that stay high in treetops. But when they return to their... Read more »


From the Spring 2026 issue of Living Bird magazine. Subscribe now. When illustrator C.F. Payne looks at the California Gull that he painted in the shape of Utah, he says that... Read more »


Last year, the Audubon Photography Awards expanded to include the South American countries of Colombia and Chile. The additions proved an immediate boon for everyone: Not only were the awards...


adult Golden Eagle (kongeørn) Siberian Jay (lavskrike) This weekend I was so lucky to spend with Per Christian at his cabin in Ringebu. This is my third visit after trips in 2022 and last year. This year’s trip was about 10 days earlier than the previous two and an absence of many of the early passerine migrants that we had seen on previous visits was explained by this but otherwise conditions felt similar. There has been little snow in these mountains this winter and at the sides of the road the depth was no more than 50cm and areas of rock and lichen were already exposed. Down in the valleys the snow was completely gone but there was still a lot of ice and apart from Whooper Swans, geese and some Cranes there were few migrants. Muen mountain at 1424 m was still covered in snow but even here rocks can be seen sticking out here we are at around 760m and looking eastwards over Gubrandsdalen. The eastern slopes are fertile farmland and as can be seen spring comes early Owls of the both the day and night active varieties were completely absent and raptors were also thin on the ground except for eagles. We started Saturday off with a young Golden Eagle and an adult White-tailed Eagle flying over it and then in the afternoon came across a couple of Goldens that appeared to have been a pair and which flew very close to us for many minutes and called lots. We were on a road and close to cabins so if we had come across a nest it would be rather amazing that they had chosen to be so close to human activity. From what I can make out they also do not normally make themselves so obvious if disturbed by a nest but I cannot think of another reason for their behaviour. One of the birds was in its 6th calendar year and only just old enough to breed. Perhaps this pair is newly formed ot even still forming which may expain all the noise? I have never previously seen Golden Eagle so well and it was an experience I will never forget. Unforuntely though it was quite challenging documenting them as the sun was behind but I managed some video and photos I am pleased enough with. In this video you can hear them calling very well. Apparantly as a species they call infrequently but this was not the case for us a video grab of the pair the other bird was clearly fully adult I did not manage to get as good photos of the younger bird I have asked Facebook how old this bird is and have got an answer that it is in its 5th plumage meaning it is a 6cy. It is (just) old enough to breed even if its plumage is not fully adult. the Golden Eagle seen earlier in the day which is I believe still in juvenile plumage and therefore a 2cy the upper tail of the same bird as it goes into land the adult White-tailed Eagle (havørn) that was above it At the cabin the Siberian Jays did not show at all on Saturday and even though I was worried PC was still guaranteeing we would see them and whilst enjoying coffee on Sunday morning up to six birds provided a yet again unforgettable experience as they fed within spitting distance of us. Siberian Jay (lavskrike) Another, for me, new experience came on the drive home when we discovered around 30 Black Grouse in a roadside stubble field. I have never come across them like this before and cannot recall seeing a picture in Norway of similar behaviour. They were equally split male and females and although one male was displaying I do not think it was a lekking congregation but rather feeding birds. When we first saw them at speed from the car I had no idea what they were and even if they were living creatures so after stopping the car and walking back to them it was a real shock to discover their identity. two male Black Grouse (orrfugl) and here a number of females Otherwise, it was geese and swans that were the entertainment on the drives up and down. On the way up a stop at Starene revealed Tundra Beans and White-fronts amongst 2500 Pink feet and on the way back we came across many flocks of swans and geese along a very long stretch of the Glomma in both stubble and flooded muddy fields. We twitched a Bewick’s Swan and found more Tundra Beans and White-fronts. Tundra Bean Goose (tundrasædgås) with Pink-feet (kortnebbgås) and three White-fronts (tundragås) with Pink-feet A visit to the shooting ranges at the fabled BT Banen was a strangely bird less affair apart from a showy Great Grey Shrike. Great Grey Shrike (varsler) All in all a weekend that will last long in my memories. a normal Willow Tit (granmeis) and a very distinctive bird with a white tail these four Cormorants (storskarv) heading north over the mountains were a surprise


Florida Scrub-Jays are birds of strong opinions. They live only in Florida, they breed only in the Florida scrub habitat, and they can survive only in habitat that has been kept open by fire (or...


Co-authored with the Southern Adirondack Audubon Society, this opinion piece appeared in print in the Times Union on March 15, 2026.As New York advances its transition to clean energy, we face...


23. mar. 2026 kl. 13:56
Thank you for joining the flock at Audubon North Carolina’s 2026 Advocacy Day on May 27!Please complete these steps now to confirm your participation in Advocacy Day.If this is your first...


Bestyrelsen i Dansk Ornitologisk Forening – Lokalafdeling Fyn indkalder hermed til ekstraordinær generalforsamling. Dato: 15. April 2026 - klokken 18:30Sted:...


Inge er ikke mere blandt os. Med stor sorg har vi erfaret, at bestyrelsesmedlem Inge Hansen efter længere tids sygdom er afgået ved døden. Inge var en...


A clear latitudinal pattern discovered in East Asian endemic Paridae, the Varied Tit The post Clutch size revisited in Asia appeared first on British Ornithologists' Union.


Ringmærkningen: Vi vågnede til en noget lunere morgen end i går, og fik allerede fra første runde en god fangst, og iblandt dem to udenlandske gæster - en Gærdesmutte (Eurasian Wren) fra Sverige...


Ringmærkningen: Gærdesmutte fra Sverige og Jernspurv fra Belgien Lunt vejr Grøn frø og små vandsalamanderer Nyvaskede fugleposer Dagens ringmærkning og kontroller/ Today?s ringing and...


Her på falderebet inden morgendagens valg, har DOF BirdLife (Dansk Ornitologisk Forening) gjort karakterbogen op. Der er seks gode gerninger og 10 meget skuffende. Vi gør ikke krav på, at listen er komplet, og det er alene naturen og biodiversiteten, det handler om her; ikke klima- og miljøpolitik som sådan i relation til vi mennesker.


Af Bo Ryge Sørensen, redekoordinator. At opleve ørnene i deres naturlige omgivelser er en enestående oplevelse, men det er vigtigt at huske, at ørnene er særligt...


The third day in a row in fog. Morten joined me today for the first rounds but it was again very few birds. The highlight was a 3K+ Redwing ?Vindrossel?. Redwing "Vindrossel" by Hanelie Some of the...


En mistanke om, at det er svært at følge fugletrækket om foråret med PUC lytteenhed blev underbygget ved dagens samtælling mellem person og PUC. Kun 8 ud af 296 lyde, personen registrerede, var trækkald.


Grønne organisationer: Nej til vindmøller i Skjern EngeAf: Morten Lund Hansen, forperson DN Ringkøbing-Skjern, Holmsland Klitvej 117, Nr. Lyngvig; Lars Holm Hansen,...


Der er nu to nye rapporter her på hjemmesiden!Der er dels en opdateret rapport fra CES-Ringmærningen ved Brabrand sø, som nu indeholder resultaterne fra 2025,...


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