Friday, September 30, 2022

Only a few hours left to have your impact amplified

Last chance to unlock $5,000 more
Dear KAREN,

For just a few more hours, your gift will help unlock an additional $5,000 to help protect birds and their habitats from extreme weather events like megafires, drought, and terrible storms.
Nine Donors Needed Before Midnight
Name: KAREN SUSTAINER STATUS:
Unconfirmed
GIVING CHALLENGE DEADLINE: MIDNIGHT TONIGHT
Give Monthly
In the midst of this code-red climate emergency, and as their very survival is threatened, birds are relying on your support now more than ever. So please, be one of the nine new monthly donors we’re depending on and start your monthly gift right away. This special offer ends at midnight tonight.
National Audubon Society
Northern Spotted Owl.
Northern Spotted Owl.
Deadline: Midnight. Unlock $5,000 for birds and the places they need.
Extreme weather harms birds
9 Donors Needed By Midnight

Giving Challenge Deadline: MIDNIGHT TONIGHT
Donate
Dear KAREN,

There are just a few hours left before our September Giving Challenge expires—and we’re still looking for nine bird lovers to join us with a monthly gift to help unlock an additional $5,000 for birds and the places they need. This special offer ends at midnight tonight, so please don’t wait: Start your monthly gift and give birds like the Northern Spotted Owl the unwavering protection they need and deserve.

As the climate crisis intensifies, wildfires are becoming more numerous, more frequent, more widespread, and more intense. Worse yet, these megafires are severely impacting communities, harming people, and creating a new stressor for birds already threatened by habitat loss, pollution, and other factors.
 
How birds are impacted by extreme weather
Crippling droughts can push birds to their physiological limits and make them vulnerable to lethal dehydration.
Intense and long-lasting rain storms lead to prolonged migrations and potentially higher bird mortality.
Megafires are destroying vital habitats, forcing many to search for new places to nest and forage.
 
For over 115 years, Audubon’s proven combination of rigorous science, focused advocacy, and expert on-the-ground conservation has helped provide a better future for countless birds and their habitats. We know what it takes to help birds like the Northern Spotted Owl face the threats the climate crisis presents: By advocating for reduced emissions, we can battle the conditions that dry out our forests and make them more flammable. And that’s good for birds and people.

But how much we can achieve depends on caring friends like you. So please, be one of nine supporters we’re counting on to join us with a monthly donation before midnight tonight—and when you do, thanks to a generous group of donors, you’ll help unlock $5,000 more for birds and their habitats.

Sincerely,

National Audubon Society
Donate
Photo: Frank D. Lospalluto/Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
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Bird on a Wire: Latest news from Audubon California

Migration Issue: Pachanga De Las Americas | Bird Migration Explorer | Mapping Migraciones | Migratory Birds in Alaska
 
Audubon California
Migration Issue: Pachanga De Las Americas | Bird Migration Explorer | Mapping Migraciones | Migratory Birds in Alaska
Olive-sided Flycatcher
Look to the Skies
Dear KAREN,

Each fall, I marvel to encounter an Olive-sided Flycatcher as it sits bolt upright on top of the highest dead branch of a tree, calling with its distinctive pip-pip-pipThis passerine bird is en route from Alaska through California and on its way to its winter home in South America, an epic journey of 7,000 miles on wings that are only seven inches long. 

For centuries, the details of bird migration journeys were a mystery: Does the Olive-sided Flycatcher fly through Mexico City? Brave a nonstop flight between the Yucatán and Columbia? How long does it take to arrive in Bolivia? This month, Audubon and our partners launched a breakthrough in modern science, decoding where birds migrate with the new Bird Migration Explorer. Track your favorite migratory birds as they make heroic journeys each fall. 

Gaylon Parsons
Interim Executive Director
Audubon California
Olive-sided Flycatcher. Photo: Andy Reago & Chrissy McClarren/Creative Commons https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/deed.en
Elegant Tern.
Bird of the Month: Elegant Tern
Amazingly, 90% of Elegant Terns breed on one island in the Sea of Cortez. Then, they come to San Francisco Bay, particularly Aramburu Island near Richardson Bay Audubon Center, where they feast on anchovy. After refueling on that tasty treat, they fly south all the way along the west coast of South America.
  Read more
Elegant Tern. Photo: Jacqueline Deely/Audubon Photography Awards
 Creambush
Native Plant: Creambush (Holodiscus discolor)
Also known as Ocean Spray, this fast-growing, deciduous shrub has lilac-like flower plumes in late spring to early summer, nearly covering the shrub completely. The flowers then turn a tan to brown color and last through winter. It grows in full sun to partial shade and prefers rocky soils. Learn more about Native Plants and Trees
Creambush (Holodiscus discolor). Photo: Brent Miller
Pachanga de las Americas
Pachanga de las Americas
Latino Outdoors live streamed this year's Pachanga de las Americas at the Audubon Center at Debs Park. Watch "Yo Cuento: Mapping Migraciones y Más" to hear a personal migration story about how birds and people are connected through geography and culture. Featured speakers include José González, Founder of Latino Outdoors, and Moisés Moreno-Rivera, the Assistant Secretary for Equity and Environmental Justice at the California Natural Resources Agency.
 
Pachanga de las Americas. Video: Latino Outdoors
Snow Geese.
Bird Migration Explorer
Have you ever wondered where your neighborhood birds go throughout the year? With the new Bird Migration Explorer, you can find out! As millions of birds are flocking to their wintering grounds, check out your guide to the epic annual journeys made by over 450 bird species, and the challenges they face along the way. Track your favorite bird along its journey and learn more about the species that travel to and from your neighborhood.
Snow Geese. Photo: William Petrunich/Audubon Photography Awards
VIDEO: Bird Migration Explorer
VIDEO: Bird Migration Explorer
We're in a golden age of migration tracking technology and research, and the Bird Migration Explorer puts this information in one accessible and interactive location for birders and conservationists alike. Learn all about it with this introductory video.
Bird Migration Explorer. Video: National Audubon Society
Mapping Migraciones
Mapping Migraciones
Mapping Migraciones is a partnership between Audubon and Latino Outdoors to celebrate Latinidad, migration, and the stories that connect us globally. In our interactive storytelling map, enjoy a family story from Xerónimo Castañeda who shares, "my abuela, Genoveva, loved the 'sinsonte,' a mockingbird that sang beautifully at sunrise and sunset. She always said, 'El sinsonte me está cantando. The mockingbird is singing to me.'" Enjoy more heritage stories featuring the White Pelican, Swainson's Hawk, Wilson's Warbler, and Swainson's Thrush.
Mapping Migraciones. Image: National Audubon Society
Whimbrel.
Alaska's Migratory Birds
Alaska is home to nearly 250 species of migratory birds that fly thousands upon thousands of miles each spring, many making their way here to California including the Whimbrel, Surf Scoter, and Brant. The treacherous journeys they undertake are quite astonishing as they overcome countless hurdles such as exhaustion, starvation, pollution, disease, predators, tall buildings, bright city lights, and extreme weather to find the ideal place to feast, breed and nest. Enjoy this creative collaboration between Audubon Alaska and Anchorage-based artist and filmmaker Max Romey that showcases the important role of Alaska's migratory birds and key conservation areas.
Whimbrel. Image: Max Romey
Donate to Protect California's Birds
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Audubon California
1901 Harrison Street, Suite 1450, Oakland, CA 94612 USA
(415) 644-4600 | ca.audubon.org

© 2022 National Audubon Society, Inc.

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