Radar data can help save migratory birds by pausing wind turbines during peak flight times with very little impact on power. #birdconservation

https://phys.org/news/2026-06-radar-birds-turbines.html

Radar data can help protect birds from wind turbines

Wind turbines generate climate-friendly electricity, but they can pose a danger to migratory birds. A study led by the Swiss Federal Institute for Forest, Snow and Landscape Research (WSL) published in Nature Sustainability shows that weather radar data could be used to reduce the risk of collisions with only a minimal impact on electricity production: by strategically shutting down turbines when particularly large numbers of birds are in flight.

Phys.org
The eagle’s sharp 👀 eyes remind us to look deeply at what freedom means in our own lives. 🦅 #AmericanEagleDay #BirdConservation #WildlifeObservance
The eagle’s sharp 👀 eyes remind us to look deeply at what freedom means in our own lives. 🦅 #AmericanEagleDay #BirdConservation #WildlifeObservance

#WildlifeWednesday

🐝 Just posted to Habitat Gardening, this time covering the importance of native shrubs and vines to birds and other forest friends - and how to find them.

🦋 Native vines in particular 'don't get no respect' in the native plant literature. I found a particularly useful source where you can search specifically for vines.

🐦‍⬛ As usual. there are seasonal habitat improvement ideas and a long list of references and further reading. Photos from my garden are also included.

Go Native!

https://write.as/habitat-gardening/move-up-with-shrubs-and-vines

@NCConnect
#HabitatGardening #BiodiversityGardening #Gardening #NativePlants #Nature #Environment #Conservation #Biodiversity #Invertebrates #Pollinators #BirdConservation

Move Up with Shrubs and Vines

This time: Add an important vertical component to build your habitat; Enjoy and observe your garden --- Have you noticed articles about...

Habitat Gardening

Move Up with Shrubs and Vines

This time: Add an important vertical component to build your habitat; Enjoy and observe your garden [...]

https://write.as/habitat-gardening/move-up-with-shrubs-and-vines

World Migratory Bird Day

Dopo aver raccontato questa affascinante ricorrenza

Giornata mondiale degli uccelli migratori🐦

torniamo a parlare della World Migratory Bird Day – Giornata Mondiale degli Uccelli Migratori, che nel 2026 cade sabato 9 maggio, come sempre nel secondo sabato di maggio. Ma quest’anno porta con sé un messaggio ancora più coinvolgente e attuale…

🌍 Cos’è (e perché continua a emozionare)

È una campagna globale sostenuta anche dalle Nazioni Unite per sensibilizzare sulla tutela degli uccelli migratori e dei loro habitat. Questi straordinari viaggiatori attraversano continenti, oceani e città, ricordandoci che la natura non ha confini. E proprio per questo la loro protezione è una responsabilità condivisa.

📅 La particolarità della doppia data

Forse non tutti lo sanno (perfetto da aggiungere!):
la giornata si celebra due volte l’anno:

  • secondo sabato di maggio (migrazione verso i siti di nidificazione)
  • secondo sabato di ottobre (ritorno verso le aree di svernamento)

Un modo poetico per seguire il ritmo naturale delle migrazioni nel mondo.

✨ Novità 2026: “Every Bird Counts”

Il tema 2026 è: “Every Bird Counts – Your Observations Matter!” (Ogni uccello conta – Le tue osservazioni sono importanti!)

Un invito diretto a tutti noi: anche una semplice osservazione può diventare un dato prezioso per la scienza.

👉 Grande protagonista è infatti la citizen science (scienza partecipata), cioè il contributo delle persone comuni nel monitorare e proteggere gli uccelli migratori.

🔎 Un anniversario speciale

Il 2026 coincide anche con un traguardo importante: 60 anni dell’International Waterbird Census, uno dei più grandi programmi globali di monitoraggio degli uccelli acquatici. Un dettaglio che rende questa edizione ancora più significativa!

💡 Come partecipare (anche in modo chic!)

Non serve essere esperti birdwatcher:

  • una passeggiata nella natura 👣
  • una foto condivisa 📸
  • un’osservazione registrata online

possono contribuire davvero alla conservazione della biodiversità.

🕊️ Un piccolo gesto, un grande viaggio

Se nel articolo precedente si è raccontato il valore simbolico e naturale della giornata, il 2026 aggiunge un tassello importante: ognuno di noi può fare la differenza.

Perché, proprio come gli uccelli migratori ci insegnano… anche il viaggio più lungo inizia da un piccolo battito d’ali. 💫

Autore: Lynda Di Natale Fonte: web Immagine: AI #AmiciAlati #AmorePerGliUccelli #AmorePerLaNatura #ArmoniaConLaNatura #AvianMigration #BeautifulNature #BellezzaAlata #biodiversità #biodiversity #birdFriendly #BirdConservation #BirdSanctuary #BirdsInFlight #BirdWatching #CambiamentiClimatici #ClimateChange #ConservazioneDellaNatura #ConservazioneUccelli #CuriositàUccelliMigratori #DifesaDellaFauna #EcoAwareness #ecologia #EcologyMatters #ecosistemi #EcosystemBalance #EducazioneAmbientale #EnvironmentalScience #EquilibrioNaturale #FaunaSelvatica #FlyingCreatures #FotografiaNaturalistica #GiornataMondiale #GiornataMondialeDegliUccelliMigratori #GiornataMondialeDegliUccelliMigratori #HabitatNaturale #HarmonyWithNature #InquinamentoLuminoso #LoveNature #MigrationRoutes #MigratorySpecies #MigrazioneNaturale #NaturaDaPreservare #NaturaDaScoprire #NaturaEcosistemi #NaturaEcosostenibile #naturaInMovimento #NaturalHabitat #NaturaMeravigliosa #naturaSelvaggia #NatureConservation #NatureLovers #NaturePhotography #OsservazioneUccelli #ProtectedSpecies #ProtectWildlife #ProtezioneFauna #ProtezioneHabitat #ProtezioneSpecie #respectwildlife #RifugiFaunistici #RispettoPerGliAnimali #RotteMigratorie #SalvaguardiaAmbiente #SalvaguardiaDellaFauna #SaveThePlanet #ScienzaAmbientale #SensibilizzazioneEcologica #Sostenibilità #SpecieInPericolo #specieMigratorie #SpecieProtette #Sustainability #UccelliMigratori #UccelliDelMondo #UccelliEsotici #UccelliInVolo #UccelliMeravigliosi #ViaggiatoriAlati #VitaInVolo #VitaSelvatica #VoliMigratori #WildlifePreservation #WildlifeProtection #WingedWonders #WorldMigratoryBirdDay

#Orillia - #EarthDay Documentary: Saving the #NightCaller

April 22 @ 4:00 pm - 8:00 pm
Price: CA$10.00

Lakehead University – Orillia Campus
500 University Ave
Orillia, #Ontario L3V 0B9 Canada

"Celebrate Earth Day! Arrive early from 4 to 6 PM, explore community vendors, enjoy family-friendly activities and take a tour of the #IndigenousGarden.

Afterward, settle in for a screening of #WorkCabin’s documentary #SavingTheNightCaller, which follows conservation efforts to protect the elusive and enchanting #EasternWhippoorwill. The film will be followed by a discussion on local conservation work and community action, led by Mark Bisset."

FMI: https://www.birdscanada.org/event/earth-day-documentary-saving-the-night-caller

#SolarPunkSunday #BirdConservation #ConserveNature #NatureEducation #EarthDay2026 #Conservation #IndigenousGardening #Conservation

Earth Day Documentary: Saving the Night Caller

Celebrate Earth Day! Arrive early from 4 to 6 PM, explore community vendors, enjoy family-friendly activities and take a tour of the Indigenous Garden. Afterward, settle in for a screening

Birds Canada | Oiseaux Canada

Feeding birds in the UK?

The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds (RSPB) has issued new guidance to avoid spreading disease.

✋ Simply put, pause feeding any seeds or peanuts between 1 May and 31 October.

🌻 Also consider bird-friendly planting to provide natural food sources, such as sunflowers, teasels, and ivy.

🚨 The cause of an outbreak of a mysterious and deadly disease in finches in British gardens in 2005 has finally been determined by conservationists.

More guidance here:
https://phys.org/news/2026-04-garden-birds-disease.html

#SolarPunkSunday [edit]
#BirdConservation #BirdFeeding #NativePlants #Biodiversity #HabitatGardening #WildlifeConservation

How to feed your garden birds without spreading disease

The outbreak of a mysterious and deadly disease in finches in British gardens in 2005 set alarm bells ringing for conservationists. A decade later, the extent of that disease in greenfinches and chaffinches was reported. And now, bird scientists are beginning to understand how feeding birds in our gardens might be linked to their health and survival.

Phys.org

The Bird That Treats Gravity Like a Suggestion

Photo by AlexeySokolov1971 / Wikimedia Commons, licensed CC BY-SA 4.0.

Dear Cherubs, the common swift is the bird equivalent of someone who has aggressively opted out of the pavement. Tracking research reported in Current Biology found that swifts were airborne for more than 99% of their 10-month non-breeding period, and some individuals never settled at all. That is not “likes flying.” That is a full-time relationship with the sky.

  • WHY IT LOOKS LIKE A MAGIC TRICK

    The common swift, Apus apus, is built for the long game. The RSPB says swifts sleep, eat, bathe and even mate on the wing, and BirdLife describes them as spending almost their entire lives in flight, only returning to crevices in buildings or cliffs to breed. They are also fast: the RSPB puts their level-flight speed at up to 69mph, which is a wildly rude number for a bird to have.

    The important detail, though, is that “never goes to ground” is a bit too neat. Swifts do land for breeding, and the young may remain airborne for long stretches before they first touch down. Outside that brief domestic phase, they are basically sky tenants with a nesting clause. That is the sort of evolutionary arrangement that makes humans, with our shoes and stairs and chairs, look spectacularly overcommitted to the floor.

    THE SLEEP QUESTION

    Now for the part that sounds made up until the science catches up: sleep in flight. In birds generally, researchers have shown that unihemispheric slow-wave sleep is possible, meaning one half of the brain can rest while the other stays alert enough to keep things on course. A Nature Communications study on great frigatebirds even demonstrated sleep mid-flight, including this one-hemisphere trick.

    For common swifts, the evidence is more indirect but still deliciously odd. Lund University reported that some swifts remain airborne for more than 10 months, with tiny data loggers recording long stretches of flight inactivity, and the University of Geneva noted that miniature accelerometers have revealed high-altitude glides interpreted as sleep phases. So the safest way to say it is this: scientists strongly suspect swifts rest on the wing, and the bird’s lifestyle is so extreme that the sky may be its bedroom as much as its workplace.

    There is a conservation sting in the tale, too. BirdLife says swifts are under pressure from sealed-up buildings, fewer insect prey, and climate change. So the tiny aerial marvel that seems to have hacked existence still needs a few cracks, ledges and nest sites from us humans to keep its summer act going. Nature may have given the common swift the perfect body for living on the wing, but even sky acrobats need somewhere to raise the next generation.

    Sources list
    Current Biology — https://www.cell.com/current-biology/comments/S0960-9822(16)31063-6
    RSPB — https://www.rspb.org.uk/birds-and-wildlife/swift
    BirdLife International — https://www.birdlife.org/news/2024/08/23/migratory-bird-of-the-month-the-common-swift/
    Lund University — https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/article/swifts-are-born-eat-and-sleep-air
    University of Geneva — https://www.unige.ch/sciences/newsletter/academic-life/2024/common-swift-master-skies-nesting-walls-faculty-science
    Nature Communications — https://www.nature.com/articles/ncomms12468
    Wikimedia Commons image — https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Common_Swift_Apus_apus.jpg
    thisclaimer.com — https://thisclaimer.com/

    The Thisclaimer logo blends a classic warning symbol with a brain icon to represent critical thinking, curiosity, and thoughtful disclaimers. #avianSleep #birdConservation #birdFacts #birding #birds #birdsInFlight #commonSwift #migration #nature #photography #skyAnimals #unihemisphericSleep #Wildlife
    Early morning is feeding time. The mother sparrow is actively searching for insects and soft food, many of which are not even visible to us. This is nature at its best.
    #Koodugal #SparrowConservation #SaveSparrows #UrbanBiodiversity #BirdConservation #NatureConservation #WildlifeAwareness