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Birds and Bogs: Climate Change and Life at the Edge of the Boreal

  • Adirondack Interpretive Center 5922 State Route 28N Newcomb, NY (map)

Please join AWI Senior Research Scientist, Dr. Michale Glennon to hear about AWI’s boreal bird research at the Huntington Lecture Series.

New York State’s Adirondack Park is a large, intact breeding ground for numerous migratory bird species, several of which are declining throughout their range. A unique component of the Adirondack avifauna is the birds inhabiting the boreal peatlands of the park. Climate change is now widely recognized as the pre-eminent threat to biodiversity in the 21st Century. At the southern range extent for this ecosystem type and many of its avian inhabitants, the park is a valuable location from which to monitor changes in bird populations from a warming climate. Findings from long-term monitoring of boreal birds in the Adirondacks suggest that bird responses to climate change may be mediated by land use patterns, highlight the importance of a patchy habitat distribution, and raise important implications for potential conservation strategies in these habitats.

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June 11

Hamilton County Soil and Water Conservation District Water Quality Coordinating Committee Annual Meeting

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July 28

Wool and Water