[birdky] Fwd: Cornell Lab eNews: The State of the Birds
- From: John Mardis <jdmskylark@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- To: John David Mardis <jdmskylark@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 21 Mar 2009 12:45:17 -0400
a must see video on "The State of the Birds"
need to fwd this to others
Begin forwarded message:
From: "Cornell Lab of Ornithology" <cornellbirds@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: March 20, 2009 4:46:04 PM EDT
To: <jdmskylark@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Cornell Lab eNews: The State of the Birds
March 20, 2009
Yesterday, the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and partners released the
first-ever comprehensive State of the Birds report for the United
States. From the arctic and aridlands to oceans and forests, the
report summarizes the state of our nation’s birds—an indicator of
the health of the environment.
The report shows heartening evidence that conservation action in
the past 40 years has reversed declines of many birds—but it also
documents troubling declines in numerous habitats.
In a press conference announcing the report, Secretary of the
Interior Ken Salazar called for a new ethic of conservation,
saying, “ This report should be a call to action, but it is action
that is within our reach.” He said the report scientifically
documents the challenges that birds face—and shows the way to
addressing the problems through cooperative conservation efforts.
John Fitzpatrick, director of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology,
emphasized the need to apply what we have learned from conservation
successes to places such as aridlands, grasslands, coastal areas,
and Hawaii.
“Hawaii is a borderline ecological disaster…the epicenter of
extinctions and near extinctions,” he said. “It is of critical
importance that the U.S. in its great scale attend to this source
of huge pride that is a part of our country and which now
desperately needs additional investment before it’s too late for
yet a whole new series of birds and their habitats. “
Dr. Fitzpatrick also noted the key contributions of citizen-science
participants.
“Citizen science rocks,” he said. “The data that have gone into
this report are by and large collected not by a few pinhead
scientists in the conservation organizations and academic
environments but by millions of individuals who have accepted the
idea that nature is fun but who also accept the idea that with a
few minutes of attention a year, you can actually put some numbers
together. Now…we can begin to put together spectacularly massive
databases that show in detail, scale, and fine-grained scope what
the trends are.”
News media across the country highlighted the State of the Birds,
including The New York Times, Washington Post, and CNN.
We invite you to visit the State of the Birds website, where you
can watch a video, explore results of the report, or listen to a
recording of the press conference.
The State of the Birds website, video, and printed report were
produced for the partnership by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. We
thank you for your support of the Lab, which enables our science
and communications teams to bring birds to the attention of our
country’s highest levels of leadership, as well as to the general
public.
Did something inspire you in this newsletter? If so, please let us
know and please give a quick donation by clicking here. Thank you
for your support!
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