NORTHERN HARRIER
Soaring to a Brighter Future
With our eyes on the horizon, we’re inspiring hope for birds and people.
ANNUAL REPORT 2024
FROM OUR CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
THIS YEAR MARKED THE COMPLETION OF THE FIRST LEG OF our journey to deliver on the vision outlined in Flight Plan, Audubon’s bold and transformative strategic plan for 2023–2028. Together we are forging a future where birds thrive across the Americas, and the people and communities who cherish them are empowered to make a difference. The crises we face—climate change and biodiversity loss—are daunting, but they are not insurmountable. At Audubon, we have embraced the urgency of this moment. Fueled by science, strengthened by partnerships, and inspired by the resilience of birds, we are taking decisive action to protect habitat, advance climate solutions, champion public policy, and build powerful collaborations across the hemisphere. This commitment was on full display earlier this year in Newfoundland where I had the privilege of spending time with our Indigenous partners. Our partnership highlights their leadership in conserving the boreal forest—one of the most important ecosystems on the planet. Hearing firsthand how these communities are working to protect this vital habitat filled me with hope. Similarly, at COP16 in Colombia’s Cauca Valley, we brought global leaders into the fi eld to experience the breathtaking biodiversity of the region. As they marveled at birdlife, they witnessed the tangible impact of efforts by Audubon and our local partners to safeguard a landscape essential to migratory and endemic species alike. Moments like these bring our work to life, demonstrating how birds inspire people to act on behalf of our shared planet. They remind me why every acre, every dollar, every partnership, and every bird matters. They reflect the unshakable optimism and determination that drive our mission to protect birds and the places they need, today and tomorrow. Through Flight Plan we are putting the full power of our hemispheric organization toward “bending the bird curve” to halt, and ultimately reverse, the precipitous decline of birds across the Americas. Your belief in Audubon made this fi rst year a resounding success. Thank you for dreaming with us, working with us, and soaring with us.
Urgency, Action, and Optimism
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER
Dr. Elizabeth Gray
“ Through Flight Plan we are putting the full power of
our hemispheric organization toward ‘bending the bird curve’ to halt, and ultimately reverse, the precipitous decline of birds across the Americas.”
During Climate Week NYC 2024, Audubon led and participated in discussions that emphasized a science-based approach to solving the interconnected challenges of climate change and biodiversity loss. Dr. Gray spoke with leaders from government and industry about how to ensure the Inflation Reduction Act would continue to serve as an important catalyst for climate action.
NEW YORK CITY
Taking the Stage on Behalf of Birds at Climate Week
Habitat Conservation
We expanded our conservation efforts throughout the hemisphere, protecting and restoring essential habitat in places such as Great Salt Lake, North America’s boreal forest, and Cauca Valley, Colombia.
Climate Action
To mitigate climate change, we worked to transform how energy is produced and transmitted, helping bring to fruition renewable energy projects that are capable of powering 30 million homes.
Policy Leadership
We advanced the largest expansion of the Coastal Barrier Resources System in decades through legislation that will protect habitat for birds like Red Knots, American Oystercatchers, and Piping Plovers.
Community Building
Through initiatives like our biannual Leadership Conference and The Birdsong Project, we inspired people of all ages to gather together and take action in support of Audubon’s mission.
Here are a few examples of the progress we made toward achieving our key milestones during Flight Plan’s first year:
On Our Way
HABITAT CONSERVATION
NEXT
Conserve 300 million acres of connected, climate-resilient bird habitat
Audubon’s 2028 Milestones:
Pass Audubon’s Healthy Birds, Healthy Planet policy agenda
POLICY LEADERSHIP
Support the generation of 100 gigawatts of renewable energy Store 30 billion tons of carbon in conserved lands
CLIMATE ACTION
Double Audubon’s membership and inspire new constituents and coalitions to help advance our conservation efforts
COMMUNITY BUILDING
Flight Plan
Our bold strategic plan will achieve new levels of impact for birds, people, and the planet.
Read more about Flight Plan
2024 Report
Habitat
Climate
Policy
Community
Workplace Excellence
Reach & Impact
Financials
Dr. Gray overlooks Bonne Bay in Newfoundland, Canada. The boreal forest in this region of Gros Morne National Park makes for ideal bird habitat.
PEREGRINE FALCONS
CERULEAN WARBLER
HUDSONIANGODWITS in Chile
FROM OUR CHIEF CONSERVATION OFFICER
across the hemisphere, we will maximize our impact on behalf of birds and people.”
“By working collaboratively and collectively
AUDUBON DEVELOPED FLIGHT PLAN IN RESPONSE TO THE DEFINING challenges of our time: the dual crises of climate change and biodiversity loss. The plan is structured around ambitious milestones spanning four key areas: Habitat Conservation, Climate Action, Policy Leadership, and Community Building. By working collaboratively and collectively across the hemisphere, we will maximize our impact on behalf of birds and people. With the help of our partners, we are rapidly scaling our impact across the places that matter most to birds—from the boreal forest of Canada and the grasslands of the Great Plains to coastal Chile—and we are implementing blueprints to protect this precious habitat. Our conservation, restoration, and management efforts are already improving more than 116 million acres across the Americas. Flight Plan provides the roadmap to a stronger Audubon and a thriving future for birds, people, and the planet. Thanks to supporters like you, we’re already well on our way.
Where We're Flying
CHIEF CONSERVATION OFFICER
Marshall Johnson
In collaboration with local communities and partners, Audubon is working to create a network of conserved areas stretching from North America’s boreal forest to the rainforests of South America.
ANNUAL REPORT
BACK
“I’ve been heavily involved in international bird
conservation for the past 30 years. Conserva Aves is one of the best and biggest conservation programs ever started in the Americas. Flight Plan and this impressive program are key reasons that I’ve increased my support for Audubon.”
A historic milestone was achieved in July with the declaration of the Loma Santa Indigenous Conservation Area in Bolivia, which spans nearly 500,000 acres, shelters 250 bird species, and safeguards the cultural heritage of five Indigenous groups. It is the largest protected area established to date through Conserva Aves, a partnership led by Audubon, American Bird Conservancy, BirdLife International, Birds Canada, and the Latin American and Caribbean Network of Environmental Funds (RedLAC). Conserva Aves connected and conserved more than 660,000 acres in 2025 alone.
acre-feet of water in 2024 for great salt lake
68,000
UTAH
—BEN OLEWINE, FORMER NATIONAL BOARD DIRECTOR
Essential Water for a Saline Sanctuary
ONTARIO
Key Conservation of a Boreal Biome
The Mushkegowuk Council, representing seven First Nations, made strides with the Canadian government toward establishing...
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COLOMBIA
Working for nearly a year and a half, rural communities in Calima El Darién, Colombia, succeeded in establishing Alto Calima as a Regional Public Protected Area.
IOWA, MINNESOTA, AND WISCONSIN
Transformative Support for Grasslands
acres in Florida protected
200,000
Audubon’s efforts to advance grassland bird conservation received a big boost: a $2.5 million Conservation Innovation Grant from the U.S. Department of Agriculture for a pilot project that incentivizes habitat revitalization. Through the Grazing the Bar program, Audubon will pay Midwest farmers for land management that supports high-priority species such as the Upland Sandpiper after arriving from grasslands in South America. The grant will also enable Audubon to better understand and expand best practices like native plantings, prescribed burning, and brush management. The project connects with the recent expansion of Audubon Conservation Ranching program into Wisconsin building on the program’s success in 14 other states. So far more than 100 ranches covering nearly 3 million acres have earned status as Audubon Certified bird-friendly land.
Saltmarsh Sparrow
AMERICAN AVOCETS
GREEN HONEYCREEPER
Maryland’s salt marsh landscape is declining at an alarming rate, with significant impacts to fish, shellfish, birds, and local communities—a crisis with parallels in many coastal areas. To counter it, Audubon collaborated with local partners and public agencies to launch the Marshes for Tomorrow project. The project has identified 29,000 priority acres of saltmarsh for protection and restoration, plus secured a $13.2 million grant from the Maryland Department of Natural Resources to help advance projects that will support this habitat. These efforts will not only help protect vulnerable species like the Saltmarsh Sparrow, but also bolster the economies and resilience of coastal communities that rely on activities such as agriculture, tourism, and fishing.
CLOSE
A Protected Territory in Colombia’s Cauca Valley
In 2025, Audubon’s coastal programs in Texas protected 175 coastal rookery islands across the Gulf Coast—-critical havens for more than 60,000 breeding pairs of waterbirds from 27 species. Audubon’s conservation efforts in the Gulf Coast deliver measurable benefits for birds and local communities—supporting biodiversity and protecting natural systems that buffer storms and store carbon for a more resilient Texas coast. Through island ownership, long-term leases, collaborative partnerships, and proactive stewardship actions, we are minimizing human disturbance and helping to ensure safe nesting conditions in this hemispherically significant ecosystem that anchors the Central Flyway.
2028 Milestone: Conserve 300 million acres of connected, climate-resilient bird habitat
Climate change is the single greatest threat to birds and people. Audubon is working to stabilize the climate by advancing natural climate solutions and promoting a swift transition to renewable energy.
Rich in biodiversity and adaptable, mangrove habitats have long been an essential feature of coastal communities throughout the tropics. Financed by the UK Blue Carbon Fund through the Inter-American Development Bank, and implemented by Audubon and the Panama Audubon Society, the Blue Natural Heritage project has assessed the ability of mangroves in Panama’s Bay of Panama and Parita Bay to slow climate change, finding that over the next century they are projected to store and capture 26.6 million tons of CO₂. This would yield $155 million annually in economic benefits while stabilizing coastlines and mitigating the effects of sea-level rise—making the case for restoring and safeguarding mangrove ecosystems across the globe.
renewable energy projects
50+
NATIONWIDE
A Big Boost for Clean Power
MID-ATLANTIC
Green Light for Offshore Wind
In partnership with peer organizations, Audubon successfully recommended the U.S. Department of Energy designate a 12-mile-long area off the coasts of New York and New Jersey as a priority transmission corridor.
ALASKA
Preserved Natural Carbon Storage
Audubon took center stage at Climate Week NYC in September, bringing thought leadership grounded in robust science. Our experts presented a new framework for identifying areas where conservation can address climate change while benefiting birds and people and highlighted Audubon Conservation Ranching as a model for natural climate solutions with significant ecological and economic gains. A billboard featuring an 80-foot-tall hummingbird in nearby Times Square, meanwhile, caught the attention of tens of thousands of passersby, shining a spotlight on the critical role birds play as indicators of climate change.
Birds & Transmission Report
Offshore Wind Report
Solar power at sites such as Blair Audubon Center at Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary in Naples, Florida, is a critical part of Audubon’s efforts to advance renewable energy.
Teshekpuk Lake, Alaska
In partnership with peer organizations, Audubon successfully recommended the U.S. Department of Energy designate a 12-mile-long area off the coasts of New York and New Jersey as a priority transmission corridor. This infrastructure will more efficiently connect wind energy produced in the Mid-Atlantic to the power grid, significantly growing energy capacity while moving toward the elimination of polluting fossil fuels. As of September, the U.S. has approved 10 lease areas for offshore wind projects, representing more than 15 gigawatts of energy— enough to power more than 11 million homes for a year. As a member of the Regional Wildlife Science Collaborative for Offshore Wind, Audubon has played a major role in identifying and responsibly siting these projects.
2028 Milestone: Support the generation of 100 gigawatts of renewable energy Store 30 billion tons of carbon in conserved lands
Audubon paired advocacy with diplomacy to advance our Healthy Birds, Healthy Planet policy agenda, enacting nine federal policies and 38 state policies focused on protecting birds, people, and the planet.
HEMISPHERE-WIDE
Greater Federal Investment in Migratory Bird Conservation
Building on our long history of protecting migratory species, Audubon advocated for—and secured the reauthorization of—the Neotropical Migratory Bird Conservation Act.
Stronger Coastal Protections
Since 1988, Minnesota’s Environment and Natural Resources Trust Fund has provided more than $1 billion for conservation efforts, including habitat protection, environmental research, and clean water initiatives.
To help secure $16 billion for agricultural conservation programs, Audubon brought farmers and ranchers from seven states to Washington, D.C., where they met with 38 congressional offices. In an example of diplomacy in action, these landowners delivered a powerful and unified message: Conservation works, and these programs make it possible and profitable to continue their heritage of ranching on their land. In July, programs key to improving habitat, access, and soil and water quality on private lands received renewed funding.
acres of wildlife habitat, sites of historical significance, and landscapes sacred to local indigenous peoples
620,000
CALIFORNIA
More Public Lands
Audubon mobilized our members to show support for the Bird Banding Lab and the North American Breeding Bird Survey, which have quietly powered conservation in the United States and Canada for decades—providing data that reveal the health of the natural world, underpin environmental decisions, and help track progress toward conservation goals. In partnership with Ducks Unlimited, the American Bird Conservancy, and the Association of Fish & Wildlife Agencies, Audubon held a State of the Birds policy briefing with 30 House and Senate staff members of both parties to explain the importance of these programs. Nearly 24,000 community members submitted over 81,000 messages to elected officials urging them to preserve the programs’ funding.
Since 1988, Minnesota’s Environment and Natural Resources Trust Fund has provided more than $1 billion for conservation efforts, including habitat protection, environmental research, and clean water initiatives. Audubon collaborated with legislators, tribal communities, and Black-led, Latino, and Hmong organizations to mobilize voters and build support for its renewal. Voters overwhelmingly approved the fund’s reauthorization for another 25 years—this time with a community grants program to benefit smaller organizations. The fund, which is financed by the Minnesota State Lottery, is projected to raise another $2 billion by 2050, serving as a model for how Audubon scales impact through public funding.
Audubon’s Florida Coastal Islands Sanctuary Manager, Jeff Liechty, surveys an Audubon-built living shoreline.
From left: Audubon Policy Manager of Marine Conservation Remy Moncrieffe, University of Vermont Audubon on Campus chapter member Laura Annunziata, and Congressman Peter Welch (D-VT) in Washington, D.C.
Bobcat Ranch is a 6,800-acre working cattle ranch dedicated to conserving blue oak woodlands, supporting grassland birds, and demonstrating the Audubon Conservation Ranching program.
2028 Milestone: Pass Audubon’s Healthy Birds, Healthy Planet policy agenda
Throughout the hemisphere, Audubon is building a constituency that cares about—and takes action to care for—birds and the places they need.
Connecting Across the Hemisphere
In August, the Ciénaga de Mallorquín Ecopark in Barranquilla, Colombia, inaugurated its first educational bird gallery, made possible with support from Audubon. The series of 50 informational plaques highlights the ecological richness of the wetland area, which is home to more than 150 bird species, and promotes environmental -education and conservation among its more than 300,000 annual visitors. The Ecopark—a “sister center” to the Audubon Center & Sanctuary at Francis Beidler Forest in South Carolina—also provides economic benefits to community members, who work as docents and operate local businesses.
SOUTH CAROLINA, COLOMBIA
Sister Centers
Audubon Center & Sanctuary at Francis Beidler Forest has used tracking technology to show the importance of Colombia as a wintering ground for the Prothonotary Warblers that traverse the Atlantic flyway. To mark its 50th anniversary, Beidler signed a “sister center” agreement with the Ciénaga de Mallorquín Ecoparque in Barranquilla, Colombia, recognizing and celebrating their shared responsibility to protect the flyway.
NEBRASKA
Open Doors
For four days in February, more than 800,000 people from around the world venture into the woods, fields, wetlands, and backyards of their communities to record the birds they see and hear for the Great Backyard Bird Count—a tally that this year reached 8,078 species. Since its founding in 1998, the Great Backyard Bird Count has helped Audubon, the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, and Birds Canada to track long-term changes in bird populations by capturing a clear snapshot just before they migrate. It has grown to become the world’s largest biodiversity-related community science effort.
The Next Generation of Leaders
Campus chapters throughout the United States marked Earth Day with projects that included vibrant wildflower gardens and an environmental justice summit discussing the local and global impacts of climate change. Audubon on Campus equips the next generation of conservation leaders to take action while deepening their connection to the natural world.
COLORADO
Celebrating a Summer of Birds
In July, hundreds of birders and nature lovers came together to celebrate the Aspen Summer of Birds.
“The future is going to be very different than the reality
we’ve known... People need to own this work at the community level.”
—MAGGIE WALKER, FORMER NATIONAL BOARD CHAIR
The Audubon Mural Project is a public-art initiative that beautifies urban spaces while introducing new audiences to climate-threatened birds. For artist George Boorujy, the 963-foot stretch of wall in Brooklyn’s Red Hook Park called to mind the distances traversed by migrating birds. “I wanted to use the length of this site to show the length of these migration journeys,” says Boorujy, who completed this work, Migratory Pathways, in June.
MURALS
121
BIRD SPECIES
196
NEW YORK
Inspiring Art
AUDUBON MURAL PROJECT
WORKPLACE EXCELLENCE
In October, the conservation community gathered in Cali, Colombia, for COP16, the United Nation’s Biodiversity Conference.
WATCH THE VIDEO
In July, hundreds of birders and nature lovers came together to celebrate the Aspen Summer of Birds. The event was jointly presented by Audubon and The Birdsong Project in collaboration with a range of local arts and environmental organizations. The Birdsong Project fueled several events like this over the course of the year, celebrating the power of art and music to drive conservation action for birds and communities through bird walks, performances, educational talks, and more.
Watch the Video on Youtube
2028 Milestone: Double Audubon’s membership and inspire new constituents and coalitions to help advance our conservation efforts
As we advance Flight Plan, Audubon has embedded our values in everything we do while also implementing new practices that uplift a culture of workplace excellence.
Audubon established Workplace Excellence Milestones to create a culture where accountability, inclusion, and continuous learning thrive for all of our more than 800 staff members working across 11 countries. These milestones empower every team and team member to live our organizational values, drive meaningful impact, and support the long-term success of our Flight Plan goals. In the past year, we aligned our vision for how Audubon can and should work to best support our staff members and advance our mission. We introduced an improved onboarding process to ensure new employees understand their responsibilities and feel welcomed, heard, and valued; we instituted new manager training processes to support staff at every level of the organization; and we launched an organization-wide dashboard for tracking our progress toward all of the Flight Plan milestones. We have also begun to implement a culture of learning and accountability in accordance with our new organizational values. We are the most influential flock in the Americas—but only when we work together. Thanks to Flight Plan, we are maximizing our collective impact across the hemisphere.
staff members working across
800
countries
11
Soaring Together
“One of the most exciting dimensions of Flight Plan is its
ability to unify Audubon around a set of shared goals that define not only what we do, but how we work together.”
—ALLISON VOGT, CHIEF STRATEGY INTEGRATION OFFICER
REACH & IMPACT
Mid-Atlantic Coastal Program Manager Henrietta Bellman sets up a mist net at Irish Grove Sanctuary in Marion Station, Maryland.
Campus Chapter members prepare for Congressional visits in Washington, D.C.
Audubon staff install a Motus tower at John James Audubon Center at Mill Grove, Pennsylvania.
Audubon is forging hemispheric partnerships across Latin America, the Caribbean, and North America, ensuring we can protect birds year-round from sea to sea and pole to pole.
State & Regional Offices
15
Our state and regional offices encompass 31 states, linking our regional conservation and policy clout to the national stage.
centers
31
sanctuaries
29
These special places introduce visitors to the habitats we’re working to conserve and help engage blossoming birders and young conservationists.
campus chapters
92
Audubon is on dozens of college campuses, helping students become the next generation of conservationists.
chapters
415
Chapters fuel local conservation and advocacy across a wide range of communities and geographies.
Extending Our Reach, Maximizing Our Impact
Audubon’s conservation efforts begin at our offices, centers, and sanctuaries.
FINANCIALS
our offices, centers, and sanctuaries
Priority Conservation Landscapes
SANDHILL CRANES
Leadership & Financials
Financial Statement
2024
$179.2 million
77% Contributions, grants, and bequests
9% Investment earnings, appropriated
7% Earned income and other revenue
where your giving goes
80% Conservation programs
15% Fundraising
5% Management and general
Leadership
With you flying alongside us, the future is brighter than ever.
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GREAT EGRET
COMMON LOON
ATLANTIC PUFFINS
RUBY-THROATED HUMMINGBIRDS
CONDENSED STATEMENT OF ACTIVITIES
YEAR ENDED JUNE 30, 2024 (DOLLARS IN THOUSANDS)
Condensed Statement of Activities
Contributions, grants, and bequests $ 138,530 Earned income and other revenue $ 12,903Investment earnings, appropriated $ 15,532 TOTAL REVENUES, GAINS, AND OTHER SUPPORT $ 166,965 EXPENSES Conservation programs $ 143,056 Fundraising $ 26,674 Membership development $ 13,988 Other development $ 12,686 Management and general $ 94,90 TOTAL EXPENSES $ 179,220RESULTS FROM OPERATIONS $ (12,255)Investment gain, not-appropriated, and other gains $ 12,489Charitable trust additions and changes in value $ 5,142Pension and post-retirement activity $ 220CHANGE IN NET ASSETS $ 5,596NET ASSETS AT BEGINNING OF YEAR $ 567,103NET ASSETS AT END OF YEAR $ 572,699
REVENUES, GAINS, AND OTHER SUPPORT
CONDENSED STATEMENT OF FINANCIAL POSITION
June 30, 2024 (dollars in thousands)
Condensed Statement of Financial Position
ASSETS Cash and investments $ 367,517 Receivables (net) $ 42,647Beneficial interest in charitable trusts (net) $ 42,540 Pension funded status $ 515Right-of-use lease assets $ 9,800Land, buildings, and equipment (net) $ 156,553Other assets $ 4,132TOTAL ASSETS $ 623,704 LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETSAccounts payable and accrued expenses $ 19,205Deferred rent, tuition, and other liabilities $ 2,146Funds held for others $ 8,240Obligations under charitable trusts $ 7,666Lease liabilities $ 13,673Post-retirement benefit liability $ 75TOTAL LIABILITIES $ 51,005NET ASSETS $ 572,699TOTAL LIABILITIES AND NET ASSETS $ 623,704
George Golumbeski Board Chair Kathryn D. SullivanVice-ChairSusan OrrVice-Chair, Secretary Anne Beckett Rod Brown Shelly Cihan Johanna Fuentes Elizabeth Gray Kevin Harris Jessica Hellmann Pamela Hurtado Berger Steffanie Munguía Angel Ortiz Mamie A. Parker Theresa Pella Cynthia Pruett Diane Ross-Leech Lili Taylor Bernardo Vargas-Gibsone Anna Warwick Riggs
Board of Directors
Elizabeth GrayCEOMarco CarboneChief Technology OfficerAlan FeldenkrisChief Communications and Marketing OfficerMarshall JohnsonChief Conservation OfficerLisette Martinez PeacockChief Equity, Diversity, Inclusion, and Belonging OfficerIngrid MilneChief Financial OfficerMegan O’HareChief of StaffMaxine Griffin SomervilleChief People and Culture OfficerJustin StokesDeputy Chief Conservation OfficerAllison VogtChief Strategy Integration OfficerChad WilseyChief ScientistCharlotte YoungGeneral Counsel
Executive Staff
Steve AbrahamsonDanita Beck WickwireJennifer BogoTracy BoydKimberly BrandLevi Braslow Glynnis BreenMeaghan CalnanJessica Dolan Eloiza DomingoMarci EggersNeeta HatleyJulie Hill-GabrielShari KoldingLauren LawsonJohn MahoneyBrian Moore Bess MosesSamantha Putt Del PinoAurelio RamosSarah Rose Srabani RoyFelice StadlerShikitta TavaresJeff Wells
National Leadership
Trina BayardSuzanne BiemillerMichael BurgerLisa GonzalezJonathan HayesRebecca HaynesAlison HolloranAndrea JonesDavid KrauseMichelle ParkerRob SchultzCurtis SmallingKristal StonerJulie Wraithmell
State Leadership
Donate
Take Action
HOVER FOR PHOTO/VIDEO CREDITS
From top: Melissa Groo; Jair F. Coll; Mac Stone; Jen Guyton; Claudio Véliz; Meryl Lorenzo/Audubon Photography Awards; Sam Zhang; Cornell Lab of Ornithology/Macaulay Library; Daniel Alarcón Arias; David Curson/Audubon; Sydney Walsh/Audubon; Luke Franke/Audubon; Mike Fernandez/Audubon (2); Lauren Owens Lambert; Sydney Walsh/Audubon (2); Moriah Ratner; USGS; Minnesota Senate Media Service; Sydney Walsh/Audubon; Audubon Chile; Cynthia Liu, Tom McNamara, Liz Muñoz Huber/Audubon; Carlos Parra Ríos; Jennifer Tyrrell/Audubon South Carolina; Courtesy of Carolina Can; Brian Cammarano/Audubon; Sydney Walsh/Audubon (3); Luke Franke/Audubon; Liz Munoz Huber/Audubon; Sydney Walsh/Audubon (3); Collectorstudios; Susan Gregory, Simon d'Entremont, Sandeep Somasekharan, Tim Timmis, María Paula Lozano Moreno, all 5 Audubon Photography Awards. Maps: Julie Rossman/Audubon
HOW OUR WORK IS FUNDED
7% Raised in prior years for conservation
HUDSONIANGODWITS