Seal Island, Maine: Atlantic Puffin Ledge Webcam
You'll see more than Atlantic Puffins if you spend some time with this webcam.
Atlantic Puffin. Photo: Cyril Ruoso/Minden Pictures
You'll see more than Atlantic Puffins if you spend some time with this webcam.
The webcam offers an intimate view of Osprey parents Rachel and Steve's private life and all its drama.
No matter the time of day, there's almost always something happening on these boulders, which are home to more than 100 nesting pairs of Atlantic Puffins.
Black Guillemots lay their eggs each summer in rock crevices, avoiding areas where vegetation might hide predators.
Get an intimate view inside a puffin burrow—and even glimpse a young puffling while you're at it.
Early morning is the best time to catch the antics of these Osprey, who nest on a platform near Hog Island's boathouse.
Launched in March 2017, Audubon Connecticut's osprey nest cam is powered by solar energy.
This camera looks out on nest boxes designed to keep gulls from snatching Roseate Terns eggs at one of the largest colonies in the northeast U.S.
Everyone is moving to the Bay Area these days—including Ospreys. Follow one nest with Golden Gate Audubon's camera.
Located on the grounds of Tucson Audubon's Paton Center for Hummingbirds, this feeder attracts a range of hummingbird species.
This camera has hosted Osprey pairs for many years, and is now equipped with infrared lighting so the birds can be watched day or night.
You'll see more than Sandhill Cranes if you spend some time with this webcam.
You'll see more than Sandhill Cranes if you spend some time with this webcam.
Four nights after the first attack, the owl returned to Steve and Rachel’s nest despite the recent addition of lights as a deterrent.
[UPDATED] A Great Horned Owl attack on the Hog Island nest follows two such raids last year. Since the incident, steps have been taken to deter the predator.
Get an intimate view inside a puffin burrow—and even glimpse a young puffling while you're at it.
After surviving owl, wasp, and eagle attacks, the tough young bird is mending an injured wing at an Audubon rehab center in Florida.
The Great Horned Owl didn't come back, but another intruder caused Rachel, Steve, and their surviving chick to move in a hurry: wasps.
Having already lost two chicks to the raptor, Rachel has been remaining close to the nest and on high alert in a fascinating display of adaptation.
Launched in March 2017, Audubon Connecticut's osprey nest cam is powered by solar energy.
You'll see more than Atlantic Puffins if you spend some time with this webcam.
The Great Horned Owl struck the nest a little after midnight, leaving behind two survivors.
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