Topic: Cornell Lab of Ornithology
Don McCartney wasn't thinking about becoming a landlord when he retired. But things change, and now he manages more than 100 houses, rent-free, for...
Tens of thousands of people in the United States and Canada will this week rediscover the original meaning of "twitter" and "tweet" as they take part in the Great Backyard Bird Count.The organizers of the bird count -- the Audubon Naturalist Society ...
by Neil Haesler. . An Ontario man has been sentenced to seven days in jail, fined $1,000 and been ordered to serve 60 hours of community service...
Visualizing the Brainfrom Antiquity to the 21st Century Get inside the head with this exploration of the brain and the techniques neuroscientists use to study it. Essays from leading scientists and Carl Schoonover's detailed captions provide context for the many stunning ...
The Great Backyard Bird Count is an annual event sponsored by the National Audubon Society. The information is collected and used by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology to track species population and migration data. " — Cornell Lab of Ornithology Citizen Science Director Janis ...
//birding.about.c om/library/weekly/aa032101b.ht m)
So how can you convince these birds to make your birdhouse their next home? How you position your birdhouse can make a difference as well. All you have to do is surround the ...
In 1859, Henry David Thoreau wrote, " Bluebirds are common throughout the Americas but are found nowhere else in the world. Although bluebirds migrate in the late autumn, if a pair of bluebirds builds a nest in an outdoor nesting box and there ...
On the night of September 10 this year, two great columns of light went up in the Manhattan skies, marking the fallen twin towers of the World Trade Center on the ninth anniversary of the 9/11 attack. Yet it illustrates, once ...
Bird watching?Migration is the regular seasonal journey, the most common pattern involves flying north in the spring and returning in the fall to wintering grounds in warmer regions to the south. Bird movements are made in response to changes in food ...
If only bird photography worked like the human type and you could just point your camera, holler "cheese" and push the button. But yell anything at...