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Ornithologist Geoffrey Hill, a professor at Auburn University in Alabama, who previously said the yellow northern cardinal was a "one-in-a-million bird" said it is actually more rare than that.
The Northern Cardinals scientific name is Cardinalis cardinalis, but cardinals have carried many nicknames depending on their region, including: Common Cardinal, Cardinal Grosbeak, Red-bird ...
This rare yellow northern cardinal in mid-Michigan is a different species (Cardinalis cardinalis) than the also rare yellow cardinal (Gubernatrix cristata), a South American bird in the tanager ...
Known as the Christmas Bird Count, this national winter tradition has helped keep a record of bird populations around the U.S. since 1900. Here in Colorado Springs, ...
"The Christmas Bird Count has been going for more than 100 years, so we have a consistent set of data points that allow us to see different trends in bird populations and avian diversity that give ...
Credit: Shutterstock This winter marks the 125th year of Audubon’s Christmas Bird Count, in which bird nerds across the Western Hemisphere venture outside to record all the birds they see and hear..
Christmas time is here, and bird is the word. People are turning their eyes to the sky for the 125th Audubon Christmas bird count, the world's longest-running citizen science project.
This will be the National Audubon Society’s 125th year of conducting Christmas Bird Counts, with counts taking place across the U.S., Canada, Mexico and Central America.
How to join bird enthusiasts in 125th annual Christmas count Published: Dec. 12, 2024, 1:51 p.m. Birds sit in the snow at Aman Park in Kent County, Michigan on Saturday, Jan. 13, 2024.
One statistic from the recent Reading Christmas Bird Count on Dec. 15 that caught the eye of compiler Lucy has nothing to do with birds: There were 61 counters out in the field along with 19 ...
Wherever you are between Dec. 14 and Jan. 5, there’s probably a National Audubon Society’s Christmas Bird Count within reach.