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Press Room
Click the links below to read about Audubon North Carolina in the news.
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July
2008
Audubon Coastal Sanctuaries in the
Spotlight
Wrightsville Beach attracts many visitors, both on foot and
on the wing. A Wilmington Star-News article and editorial
about Mason Inlet Waterbird Management Area highlights this
Audubon sanctuary on the north end of Wrightsville Beach and
shows how people and wildlife co-exist at this popular beach.
Click on the links below to read more.
For
the birds, for everyone, Wilmington Star-News,
July 21, 2008
Waterfowl
flock to inlet preserve: Officials say waterbirds are thriving
at Wrightsville Beach sanctuary, Wilmington
Star-News, July 21, 2008
On July 16, 2008, biologists with Audubon North Carolina took a small group of reporters to one of 20 sanctuary islands that the organization protects along the coast. Although these islands are closed to public access to prevent harming nesting birds, Audubon and the US Army Corps of Engineers take media groups there on occasion to help spread the word about North Carolina’s colorful and charismatic colonial waterbirds, such as terns, ibises, and black skimmers. The Army Corps of Engineers created this dredge island near Wilmington. Dredge material islands mimic habitats that were once abundant along the North Carolina coast and provide refuges for birds that have been squeezed out of native habitats by development. Click on the links below to view news reports and photographs from this tour. Click here to learn more about Audubon North Carolina’s Coastal Sanctuaries and click here to learn more about North Carolina’s colonial waterbirds.
Bird
Island,
Wilmington Star-News, July 16, 2008
Birds are flocking to Bird Island off of the Fort Fisher coast, WECT, Wilmington, July 16, 2008
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One
good tern deserves another
Mason Inlet Waterbird Management Area is a win-win conservation
story, where least terns, black skimmers, and common terns
are successfully raising chicks under the watchful gaze of
Audubon biologists and community volunteers. This summer Wrightsville
Beach visitors are being treated to free guided walks through
varied habitats where they can observe nesting birds from
a safe distance. Read more about it in
Wrightsville
Beach Magazine.
June 2008
Legislation aims to strip vital
protections from threatened wildlife on Cape Hatteras National
Seashore
Legislation
introduced on June 11 by U.S. Sens. Elizabeth Dole and Richard
Burr and U.S. Rep. Walter Jones (all of North Carolina) would
allow the short-sighted wishes of small special interest groups
to take precedence over the continued survival of the unique
national resources that make Cape Hatteras National Seashore
so special.
Read recent editorials opposing this legislation:
The
News & Observer
The
Fayetteville Observer
The
Virginian-Pilot
The
Virginian-Pilot
May 2008
May 16, 2008
Audubon North Carolina is pleased to announce the completion of the Piedmont section of the North Carolina Birding Trail, a driving trail linking great birding sites throughout the state. A full-color guidebook accompanies the new portion of trail and its 103 birding sites. The guidebook features site descriptions, maps and photos. Audubon North Carolina is one of six agencies partnering on this exciting ecotourism project. Learn more about the Birding Trail from the News and Observer and the Southern Pines Pilot.
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