Meteorological spring is here, and bird migration in the Lone Star State is underway. "Lights Out, Texas" is a movement ...
BirdCast shares a three-day forecast for the migration as well as a live map of the migration. Clicking through the three-day forecast can help birders plan ahead for the next few days. The BirdCast ...
A male blue-winged warbler. Long-distance bird migration is one of the natural world's most inspiring phenomena-but the story of how we know what we know about bird migration is almost as amazing as ...
Millions of birds invisibly migrate through the night sky each autumn, most flying in near silence toward their wintering grounds. Now, scientists have developed a way to see and identify many of ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Warblers, like this chestnut-sided warbler, leave Connecticut during the fall bird migration. (Courtesy of Paul Fusco, CT DEEP) ...
Bird migration represents one of nature’s most remarkable phenomena, where millions of feathered travelers navigate thousands of miles using nothing but instinct and celestial navigation. This aerial ...
Spring is an exciting time to be a bird nerd on the Texas Gulf Coast. As fresh buds begin to swell on the trees and Texas ...
As summer vacations wrap up and kids return to school, one small bird is preparing for a monumental journey. Hummingbird migration season gets underway in August, sending the birds flying to warm ...
Louisville is very fortunate to be part of an amazing bird migration which has been taking place annually in the spring and fall for millennia. Many of these birds are warblers, which are about the ...
As we fly into spring, the birds should start coming back. There are plenty of resources to keep an eye on what is going on with birds in the big sky.
On a sweltering late-July afternoon, a mother wood duck and her seven ducklings tucked into a shady spot on the island in Bay View’s Humboldt Park Pond. “This is the first year we’ve had baby wood ...
“Birds do some amazing things,” says NH Audubon raptor biologist Chris Martin, co-host of Something Wild, “and migration is at the top of that list.” Scott Weidensaul is a naturalist and ornithologist ...