The 2021 Audubon Photo Awards: Top 10 Videos
Settle in and watch spectacular footage of birds in the wild, and find out the backstory behind each video.
Cedar Waxwings. Video: Bob Schamerhorn/Audubon Photography Awards
Settle in and watch spectacular footage of birds in the wild, and find out the backstory behind each video.
Cedar Waxwings. Video: Bob Schamerhorn/Audubon Photography Awards
Settle in and watch spectacular footage of birds in the wild, and find out the backstory behind each video.
Winter cyclones, responsible for killing seabirds every year, are projected to intensify right where millions of birds overwinter in the North Atlantic.
A personal take on Audubon’s work to make the arid West more livable for people and birds.
Audubon and the Seal River Watershed Alliance, an Indigenous non-profit coalition, have worked together to record the sounds of a critical bird breeding area.
The first of three reports finds that the climate is warming at alarming levels, with consequences for communities and for wildlife.
Affected states recommended taking down feeders during the disease outbreak, but now all say feeders can go back up.
The mandate that submissions include a hunting scene is going away next year. For now, these subversive artists are having some fun.
But to harness their full bug-eating potential, it’ll likely help to remove the invasive tree-of-heaven.
Scroll through these superb images that feature birds in all their varied glory, and find out the backstory behind each shot.
Thousands of people entered photographs and—for the first time— videos in this year’s contest. The finest images showed birdlife at its most tranquil, clever, and powerful.
Artists have painted murals of birds all over Harlem, the Manhattan neighborhood where John James Audubon once lived.
Each year more than a billion birds migrate along the Pacific Flyway, which stretches from the North Slope of Alaska to Central and South America.
Audubon follows the birds to our work, organizing our conservation strategies along the four flyways of the Americas.
Start your day with a birding adventure!
Trinity River Audubon Center Trails are open!
The Pacific Flyway includes Alaska, Hawaii, Washington, Oregon, and California
The Mississippi Flyway is named for the great river underpinning the migration route followed by 60 percent of North America's birds, including the American White Pelicans, Least Terns, and Prothonotary Warblers. By restoring habitat from the headwaters of the Mississippi to the Louisiana Delta, Audubon is protecting birds year-round.
Audubon follows the birds to our work, organizing our conservation strategies along the four flyways of the Americas.
Start your day with a birding adventure!
Trinity River Audubon Center Trails are open!
From the forests of New England, where birds like the Wood Thrush nest and breed, to the beaches and marshlands that stretch down the coast and provide habitat for Piping Plovers and Saltmarsh Sparrows, Audubon is employing tactics as diverse as this flyway's ecosystems to protect the millions of birds that depend on this flyway.
Audubon follows the birds to our work, organizing our conservation strategies along the four flyways of the Americas.
Start your day with a birding adventure!
Trinity River Audubon Center Trails are open!
The Atlantic Flyway includes Connecticut, Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Vermont, Virginia, West Virginia, Las Bahamas
Stretching from the Rocky Mountains to the Great Plains to the desert Southwest and the western Gulf Coast, the Central Flyway comprises more than half of the continental U.S.'s land mass and includes 509 Important Bird Areas. Across this expansive flyway, such iconic bird species as the Greater Sage Grouse, Sandhill Crane, and Yellow-billed Cuckoo drive Audubon's work to protect threatened ecosystems.
Audubon follows the birds to our work, organizing our conservation strategies along the four flyways of the Americas.
Start your day with a birding adventure!
Trinity River Audubon Center Trails are open!
The Central Flyway includes Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Kansas, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, Wyoming