Help us bring birds back from the brink.
Dear KAREN, Right now, the Golden-cheeked Warbler is up against a host of threats: climate change, habitat loss, and nest predation. Its total range and population are small, its habitat is disappearing as the area becomes more developed, and where it does still breed, cowbirds often lay their eggs in its nest. With their range already dwindling in size by 1.5 million acres in just 12 years, we don't have a moment to waste to help bring them back from the brink of extinction. Here's how bird lovers like you can help! Your generosity powers our work to protect vulnerable birds like the Golden-cheeked Warbler and the places they need to survive. We still need 129 compassionate people to chip in before midnight to keep us on track to hit our year-end goal. Thanks to a generous group of donors, your gift will be matched 2X up to $500,000. | | | | |
There is reason to be hopeful, KAREN. Just last year there was a Golden-cheeked Warbler sighting at Dogwood Canyon Audubon Center at the extreme edge of their breeding range. An area where the warbler hadn't been documented in well over a decade. Dogwood Canyon and the surrounding landscape provide hundreds of acres of healthy woodland habitat for the Golden-cheeked Warbler and we're hopeful they'll continue to return. | | | | |
It's estimated that 1.5 million acres, nearly a third of the Golden-cheeked Warbler's home range, disappeared between 1999 and 2011. | | | | | |
In the most extreme warming scenario the Golden-cheeked Warbler could lose 92% of its range. | | | | | |
Nearly 400 North American bird species are at increasing risk of climate extinction. | | | | | |
Photo: John Mangold/Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0). Illustrations: Golden-cheeked Warbler, Piping Plover, Western Yellow-billed Cuckoo | | | | |
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