Audubon Magazine

AN AVOIDABLE FATE

IF YOU WERE A BIRD SOARING OVER the American landscape in 2022, you would be hard-pressed to find any part untouched by climate change. A Western Sandpiper, in its journey down the Pacific Coast, would have suffered through a historic heat wave in California that brought triple-digit temperatures to the Hollywood Hills. A Burrowing Owl hunting under the red buttes of Arizona and Utah may have noticed that years of drought have driven Lake Powell and Lake Mead to dangerously low levels. In the relentless summer rains that flooded central Appalachia, an Indigo Bunting might have fled an inundated Kentucky holler for higher ground. A Bald Eagle pair in southern Florida could have found their nest blown away from Hurricane Ian’s ferocious winds.

These disasters, which killed hundreds of people and cost billions of dollars in damage to homes and critical

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Audubon Magazine

Audubon Magazine2 min read
Why Are Flycatchers So Hard to Identify?
I OFTEN TELL PEOPLE THAT UNDERSTANDING why a species is difficult to identify can be key to making an ID. No birds illustrate this better than tyrant flycatchers (family Tyrannidae), one of the world’s largest bird families, with well over 400 specie
Audubon Magazine3 min read
A Matter of Scale
IT’S BEEN MORE THAN THREE decades since the U.S. government first tested the waters of offshore fish farming. In 1990 a company received a federal permit to raise nearly 50 million pounds of Atlantic salmon a year in pens anchored some 50 miles off M
Audubon Magazine1 min read
Clear Winners
One of the most effective collision deterrents—when installed on the exterior of windows—does double duty by also keeping unwanted bugs out of your home. Either secured above and below or left to dangle in the breeze, closely spaced vertical cords on

Related Books & Audiobooks