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Spring 2008 Newsletter
(1.2 MB PDF)
 
Find an Audubon
Chapter
Near You!
 
Birding Hotlines around
ALASKA
907.338.BIRD (Anchorage)
907.235.7337 (Homer)
907.224.2325 (Seward)
907.451.9213 (Fairbanks)
907.262.2300 (Central Kenai Peninsula)
 
Big Bucks Bid for Bear Abode

  © Marc Webber, USFWS
The Chukchi is one of the most productive ocean ecosystems in the world; habitat for Pacific walrus, millions of seabirds and waterfowl, four species of ice seals, several species of endangered whales, and half of America’s polar bears. This past February, the US Department of the Interior held the first of several planned oil and gas lease sales on nearly 30 million acres of the Chukchi Sea—an area the size of Pennsylvania.

READ MORE about the Chukchi Sea and what Audubon is doing.
TAKE ACTION by contacting your Senators.

DONATE NOW to Audubon Alaska and help us defend the Chukchi.


Chiniak Bay Gets Global IBA Status

  © David Menke, USFWS
Chiniak Bay, off of Kodiak Island, is one of a group of sites in Alaska recently recognized as globally-significant Important Bird Areas (IBAs). This is the highest designation an IBA can get! Chiniak Bay supports at least 23 seabird colonies during the summer, and it provides wintering habitat for Steller’s Eiders, Emperor Geese, and Yellow- billed Loons, among others. A number of other species, such as the Black Oystercatcher, Marbled Murrelet, Peregrine Falcon, and Bald Eagle, are year-round residents.

READ ALL ABOUT IT in the Kodiak Daily Mirror.
GET THE SCOOP on Alaska's IBAs.
DONATE NOW to support Audubon's conservation work in Alaska.


Birding Maps Now Available!

 
Just in time for spring migration, birding maps are now available for the greater Anchorage, Fairbanks, and Kodiak areas. All three maps include local bird checklists and site descriptions for dozens of local birding hot spots.

CLICK HERE for more information.


BLM Decision for Teshekpuk Still Pending
  © Gerrit Vyn, The Macaulay Library of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology

The federal Bureau of Land Management is still reviewing public comments on its plans to open Teshekpuk Lake and surrounding lands on the North Slope for oil and gas development. Teshekpuk is one of the most sensitive and important wetlands in the Arctic, providing habitat for tens of thousands of calving caribou, shorebirds, and molting geese, including more than a dozen Alaska WatchList species.

READ MORE about Teshekpuk Lake.
WRITE AN EMAIL to Congress and the Secretary of the Interior.
SEE PICTURES of Teshekpuk Lake on the Field and Stream website.

DONATE NOW to Audubon Alaska and help us protect Teshekpuk Lake and wildlands across the Great State.


Tongass Forest: Last Chance for Temperate Rainforest
 
© John Schoen
The Tongass National Forest in Southeast Alaska is our nation’s largest national forest. Nearly 17 million acres in size, it encompasses the largest intact temperate rainforest on earth, and it is home to abundant fish and wildlife, including Marbled Murrelets, brown bears, and all five species of Pacific salmon. But conservation of the Tongass is at a critical juncture. This is our last chance to protect temperate rainforest at an ecosystem scale.


READ MORE about the Tongass National Forest.
VIEW A SLIDESHOW of Tongass photographs.
CHECK OUT National Geographic’s recent article on the Tongass.
READ OUR CONSERVATION ASSESSMENT for the Tongass.

Audubon Alaska
715 L Street, Suite 200
Anchorage, AK 99501
phone: 907.276.7034 | fax: 907.276.5069
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