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The annual Christmas Bird Count with the Audubon Society is a fun holiday outing where you can participate in community science and ecology research while getting the whole family outdoors.
The Arctic Audubon Society is preparing to scour the Interior for the group’s 63rd Christmas Bird Count. The annual count will take place in Fairbanks on Dec. 16. Bird watchers of all levels are ...
Blackbrook Audubon Society is inviting nature enthusiasts to contribute to its early-winter bird census Dec. 28, as Blackbrook will join thousands of other volunteer teams across North and South Am… ...
Dec. 5—For the 125th year, the National Audubon Society is organizing the annual Audubon Christmas Bird Count (CBC). On Dec. 14, birders and nature enthusiasts in the greater Oak Hill area of ...
There’s bird data from the Christmas Bird Count that goes back to the 1910s in the Pittsburgh region, according to Brian Shema, operations director at the Audubon Society of Western Pennsylvania ...
The National Audubon Society’s 125th Christmas Bird Count will be held from Dec. 14, 2024, to Jan. 5, 2025. This is one of the longest-running citizen science projects on Earth. The count was ...
The Christmas Bird Count (CBC) is the longest-running community science project for birders and is sponsored by the National Audubon Society. The official dates run from Dec. 14, 2024, to Jan. 5 ...
Each December, the Audubon Society holds its Christmas Bird Count, where people throughout the Western Hemisphere take a few minutes to step outside and document what birds they see.
The National Audubon Society’s 125th Christmas Bird Count will be held from Dec. 14, 2024, to Jan. 5, 2025. This is one of the longest-running citizen science projects on Earth.
Join the flock for the Pittsburgh Christmas bird count 02:30. PITTSBURGH (KDKA) — It's the most wonderful time of the year for birdwatchers because the Audubon Society of Western Pennsylvania's ...
The National Audubon Society’s 125th Christmas Bird Count will be held from Dec. 14, 2024, to Jan. 5, 2025. This is one of the longest-running citizen science projects on Earth.