Federal Priorities for a Secure Water Future in the West
How Audubon will work with a new Congress and Administration to advocate for people and birds.
The California Working Lands priority project supports healthy land-management practices for farmers and ranchers who work in California's Central Valley. More»
The birds of the Pacific Flyway depend on a diverse chain of habitats, from Arctic tundra and northwestern rainforest to tropical beaches and mangroves. Audubon’s network of chapters, volunteers, activists, and members is preserving and restoring these vital links along the way.
Each year at least a billion birds migrate along the Pacific Flyway, but these birds are only a fraction of those that used the flyway a century ago. Habitat loss, water shortages, diminishing food sources, and climate change all threaten the birds of the Pacific Flyway.
Photo: Ethan Welty
How Audubon will work with a new Congress and Administration to advocate for people and birds.
Audubon-sponsored bill encourages ranching practices that restore grasslands and sequester carbon.
The Salton Sea is one of the most important places for birds in North America and is in danger of losing its ecological value. If it does, we will lose a vital part of the Pacific Flyway.
With Audubon’s expertise in both Western water policy and conservation science, we are uniquely positioned to identify long-term water-management solutions that will secure a reliable water supply for wildlife and for people throughout the West.
Saline lakes and their associated wetlands throughout Intermountain West create a network of critical habitat that millions of birds depend on for breeding, resting and feeding during migration, and wintering.
Audubon takes effective action to stabilize and increase populations of at-risk species up and down the Pacific Coast
Audubon Alaska is pursuing permanent wilderness designation for the coastal plain of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
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