Birds urgently need your help to protect them.
Recently, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife service announced that 10 bird species were removed from the endangered species list due to extinction. This is the exact kind of news we're fighting against, KAREN. But with climate change increasingly wreaking havoc, even more birds, like the beloved Allen's Hummingbird are at increasing risk of extinction. | | | | |
Audubon is advocating for the large-scale change necessary to alter the course of climate change and habitat loss, leading to healthier populations for species like the Allen's Hummingbird and many others. If we can stabilize carbon emissions and keep warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels, and not the most extreme outlook scientists fear, three quarters of species would be better off, and nearly 150 species of our most at-risk birds would no longer be vulnerable to extinction from climate change. | | | | |
389 Species Are On the Brink | | | | |
Two-thirds of North American birds are at increasing risk of extinction from global temperature rise. | | | | | |
According to the North American Breeding Bird Survey, Allen's Hummingbird populations declined by 80% between 1968 and 2019. | | | | | |
Allen's Hummingbirds could lose 64% of their range in a 3 degree warming scenario. | | | | | |
Photo: Tony Britton/Audubon Photography Awards. Illustrations: Allen's Hummingbird, Scarlet Tanager, Piping Plover, Rufous Hummingbird. | | | | |
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