News

Ornithologist Bruce Beehler tracks down what he calls the “Magnificent Seven,” a charismatic group of migratory birds, in his ...
In North America, birds typically fly south for the winter before food is less available during the colder months, then back north in the spring to take advantage of growing insect populations ...
A 2019 study sounded the alarm on declining North American bird numbers, finding the region lost nearly 3 billion birds since 1970. “This new analysis helps us turn that alarm into action by ...
A study published in Science reveals that North American bird populations are declining most severely in areas where they ...
Millions of birds are flying over Mississippi every night for the next few weeks. You can help them move safely. Here's what to know, when to be ready ...
Over the next 2-3 weeks, millions of birds will fly through Colorado skies as they migrate north for the summer — and you can ...
North American bird populations are plummeting, especially in drylands, grasslands and the Arctic where they have historically been most abundant, new research has found.
Great egrets and little blue herons. Blue-winged warblers and yellow-bellied sapsuckers. Snowy owls and tropical kingbirds. Across North America, three-fourths of bird species are in decline ...
North American bird populations are shrinking most rapidly in the very areas where they are still most abundant, according to a new study leveraging citizen science data for nearly 500 bird species.
This is peak time for spring migration. Countless numbers of warblers and other neotropical songbirds are streaming into Georgia — returning from winter grounds in Latin America and the Caribbean for ...