A Nighthawk Adventure
by Dyanna Smith It’s 6:15 on Friday evening and I am on my way out the door at McLane Center. Tonight I have finally carved out the time to venture
by Dyanna Smith It’s 6:15 on Friday evening and I am on my way out the door at McLane Center. Tonight I have finally carved out the time to venture
On Thursday, July 19, NH Audubon raptor biologist Chris Martin and volunteer Jack Dorsey paddled a short section of the Connecticut River along River Road in West Chesterfield, NH. They
Thanks to a generous grant from the Sarah de Coizart Trust, NH Audubon launched a multi-state damselfly project this summer (2018). The project focuses on four species of bluets (New
by Chris Martin, NH Audubon Senior Biologist The fledging of Manchester’s peregrine chicks signals the start of peregrine fledging at sites across NH. The site at Brady-Sullivan is just one
Monday, May 7, 2018 Among newly scattered eggshells, the female Peregrine Falcon wiggles down to cover her two chicks and three remaining eggs. It’s all unfolding in downtown Manchester, and
On April 28, 2018, the Ware River Nature Club is convening a one-day conference focusing on avian aerial insectivores. Both Becky Suomala and Pam Hunt from NH Audubon are presenting
It’s always nice to hear from an old friend! For NH Audubon’s raptor biologist Chris Martin, receiving a wildlife photographer’s image of a Peregrine Falcon that he color-banded several years
The New Hampshire Bat Survey Project began in 2012 when New Hampshire Audubon joined forces with the New Hampshire Fish & Game Department, the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service New
A class of pesticides (neonicotinoids) has recently been implicated in the decline of pollinators and a group of birds called aerial insectivores. The Conservation Department staff and Environmental Policy Committee
Butterflies are widely recognized as important components of natural ecosystems. Adults can be important pollinators, larvae can be major herbivores, and all life stages provide food to other wildlife species.