
Wood Thrush Migration Update
(by Pam Hunt) 2025 was the second year that NH Audubon participated in the range-wide effort to track Wood Thrushes using the Motus Wildlife Tracking Network. The project as a

(by Pam Hunt) 2025 was the second year that NH Audubon participated in the range-wide effort to track Wood Thrushes using the Motus Wildlife Tracking Network. The project as a

(by Pam Hunt) 2025 is the second year of the range-wide Wood Thrush tracking project coordinated by the US Fish and Wildlife Service, and NH Audubon and our partners set

(by Pam Hunt) Now that spring migration is back in full swing, it’s time to see what happened to some of the 27 Wood Thrushes we tagged in NH in

New Hampshire Audubon is grateful for generous funding recently awarded from the following supporters: NH Audubon received grant awards from the Benjamin and Gertrude Couch Trusts to continue work on

New Hampshire Audubon is grateful for the generous funding recently awarded from the following supporters: NH Audubon received a grant award from the Norwin S. & Elizabeth N. Bean Foundation

(by Pam Hunt) The flutelike “ee-o-lay” song of the Wood Thrush remains a familiar sound in hardwood forests east of the Great Plains, but over the last 50 years it

New Hampshire Audubon is grateful for generous funding recently awarded from the following supporters: The Maine Outdoor Heritage Fund selected NH Audubon to receive a grant supporting research of Rusty