In this issue: 2024 Audubon Photography awards, ballooning deer herds, rooftop seabird nests
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Audubon Magazine | Summer 2024 | | | | |
Don't worry—it's just a fancy way to say that Audubon magazine is celebrating 125 years of delivering important news, inspiring photography, and practical advice to help readers enjoy and protect birds and the places they need. We are honored to be part of this storied publication's rich history, and we take seriously our responsibility to keep it vital and valued long into the future. We hope you enjoy our Summer issue, and many more to come. —The Editors | | | | |
Blackburnian Warblers, Summer 2024 Audubon magazine. | | | | |
For our 125th anniversary, we dug into our archives and curated content to inform and delight readers—just as Audubon has done for generations of birders. Explore our interactive hub | | These graphics stem from an analysis of 700-plus covers dating back to our first issue. | | | | | | |
Mating, fighting, dive-bombing for food: This year's prize-winning images and videos are packed with avian action—now in even more categories. (And don't miss this year's Top 100 photos—you deserve a treat.) Feast your eyes | | | | | | |
From the vault: Archival photos show how Audubon scientist Robert Porter Allen led the effort to pull Whooping Cranes back from the edge of extinction. Explore the historic images | | A family of Whooping Cranes at the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge, Texas, in early 1947. | | | White-tailed deer are denuding forests that many birds rely on. Determined land managers can protect patches, but solving the larger problem may require bold action. Go deeper | | At Cornell University's Arnot Teaching and Research Forest, a "slash wall" acts as a barrier to hungry deer, allowing a healthy young forest to grow. | | | | | |
Audubon magazine is now in its 125th year of delivering essential news, advice, and reporting on the birds you love. Become a donor today and you'll not only contribute to vital efforts to reverse the alarming decline of birds, you'll also support quality journalism and receive our beautiful, award-winning print quarterly, delivered straight to your mailbox. | | Wilson's Phalarope, Spring 2024 Audubon magazine. | | | | | | |
Photos from top: Mathew Malwitz/Audubon Photography Awards/2024 Grand Prize Winner; Travis Potter/Audubon Photography Awards/2024 Female Bird Prize Winner; Andreas Feininger/The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock; Melissa Groo; Mary Anne Karren. Illustration: Joan Wong | | | | |
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