Listen to the Birds Today

Some days, they sing messages of peril. But some days, they sing songs of beauty and hope.
An Indigo Bunting sings on top of a sunflower.
A male Indigo Bunting sings from the top of a sunflower. Photo: Scott Suriano/探花精选 Photography Awards

Over the past few issues of 础耻诲耻产辞苍听magazine I have shared some of the ways that birds tell us things. They tell us what is happening to the air and water and land that we all need to survive. They tell us about a changing climate鈥攐r the arrival of spring.

At 探花精选 we listen to what birds are telling us. When night-migrating warblers tell us, with their fragile bodies littering the sidewalks, that light pollution is deadly and needs to be fixed, our network comes together to press for Lights Out proclamations or ordinances in cities .

When hungry Atlantic Puffin chicks tell us that forage fish stocks are low or hard to find, our Coasts and Conservation Policy teams have pushed to make sure that fisheries are managed in such a way that birds will have enough to eat.

When the songs of Western Meadowlarks become less frequent because our prairies are converted to monocrops and parking lots, our Conservation Ranching team makes sure that ranchers across the West have access to land-management practices that sustain grassland birds, while also ensuring that their products have a market through partnerships with retailers such as Panorama Meats.

But in addition to being messengers, birds bring us so much joy. Take, for example, the people who flocked to Montrose Beach in Chicago to watch as the first Piping Plovers in more than 70 years nested there. Although Monty, the beloved duo鈥檚 male, died this spring,聽one of their chicks has since returned to the Great Lakes, where it successfully fledged the first Ohio Piping Plover chicks in more than 80 years.聽

Consider the thousands of 探花精选 chapter members who lead advocacy days, birding trips, art festivals, birding festivals, and native plant sales or participate in community science projects like the Christmas Bird Count or Climate Watch, all inspired by the love they feel for the birds in their communities.

Or think of the thousands of photographers who quietly wait for the perfect moment鈥攕ometimes in brutally hot or frigid conditions鈥攑oised to capture glory.

The results of some of that labor can be seen in the stunning winning entries of the 探花精选 Photography Awards. Each of these photos perfectly captures the sheer power of birds.

If music or poetry is more your thing, I invite you to listen to some of the songs and poems inspired by birds in For the Birds: The Birdsong Project. This project, the brainchild of Grammy Award-winning and Emmy Award-nominated music supervisor Randall Poster and his friend, the producer Rebecca Reagan, celebrates the beauty that birds bring into our lives鈥攁nd the need to protect them鈥攚ith an outpouring of creativity by more than 200 artists including Yoko Ono and Andrew Bird. All proceeds from the project benefit 探花精选.聽

However birds capture your imagination, I hope that your summer is full of their beauty.

This piece originally ran in the Summer 2022聽issue. To receive our print magazine, become a member by聽.