News

It’s a bit of a mystery where some birds go when they leave Alaska for the winter. A recent tracking project on the ...
The Klamath Bird Observatory, along with partners at USFS, USGS, Cape Arago Audubon and Avifauna Northwest, is using these GPS tags to track the migratory routes and overwintering locations of both… ...
The Iowa Department of Natural Resources participates in a global network that uses small tags and antenna receivers to track migratory patterns of birds, bats and insects, and it has recorded 607 ...
Long before satellites, weather radars, and phone alerts told us when a storm was coming, nature had its own forecasters ...
"I hope that something is done ... so they can survive on their own." Residents thrilled as lucky bird species returns after ...
But scientists across the West are increasingly turning to an accessible, low-cost technology to answer key questions about bird migration and how climate change is impacting their life cycles ...
Tens of thousands of Purple Martins have landed in Nashville as they migrate from as far north as Canada all the way to South ...
Whether it is through GPS tracking collars on scimitar-horned oryxes in Chad or satellite tags on birds in Maryland, an animal’s movement can tell our scientists whether their population is healthy, ...
In Kansas, some cattle are now wearing GPS trackers. It's part of a plan to see if invisible fences can help ranchers grow healthy grass while also protecting disappearing prairie birds.