Advocacy

A terrible idea.

The WDNR Southwest Savanna Draft Master Plan released March 18, 2021, reports the DNR's recommendations and options for managing DNR lands in the part of southwest Wisconsin historically dominated by prairies and savannas. It includes all or parts of Lafayette, Grant, Iowa, Green, and Dane Counties. Much of the plan documents the importance of the prairies and savannas and emphasizes the need to preserve or restore those habitats which have declined dramatically for many decades.

Photo courtesy of WDNR

Joining the Bird Names for Birds movement

Birds are awesome. Some of the people they’re named for aren’t.

Birds should have their own descriptive names. And as of March 26, 2021, Madison Audubon joins 10 other organizations rallying behind the Bird Names for Birds movement, which pushes for birds with honorific names (like Henslow’s Sparrow and Cooper’s Hawk) to be renamed with names that describe the bird.

Madison Audubon is now an official supporter of Bird Names for Birds!

Join the Bird Collision Corps this spring

This yellow warbler is one of the lucky ones. It struck a window, but unlike the hundreds of millions of birds that die after colliding with windows, this warbler was able to recover and fly away. We love these happy endings! And, we can make more of them by working together. Join the Bird Collision Corps this spring to help learn more about bird-window collisions and how we can best prevent them.

Or if you can't volunteer but want to help, you can sign our petition in support of Madison's Bird-Safe Glass Ordinance!

Photo by Crystal Sutheimer

Burn Season

Burn Season

If the photo above gave you heart palpitations: never fear. It’s burn season (and that’s a good thing!).

Burning is key for many reasons to the health of prairies and savannas. These systems are fire dependent. Fire renew fertility, spark the reproductive cycle of some plants, suppress woody vegetation, and control some invasive species. No fire = no prairies, no savannas.

Photo by Roger Packard

What's the price of losing birds?

If you have ever heard that sickening thud of a bird hitting a window, you are not alone. Up to one billion birds die from colliding with windows every single year in the U.S. Not just a few. Up to a billion.

In August 2020, Madison Audubon was proud to support the passage of Madison's new Bird-Safe Glass Ordinance, the first of its kind in Wisconsin but one of dozens nation-wide. The ordinance requires bird-safe glass be used in construction and major renovations of buildings 10,000 square feet or larger. But, now the ordinance is facing a legal challenge by the Wisconsin Institutes for Law and Liberty, representing developer groups that would like to see the ordinance go away.

We must fight back.

Photo by Corliss Karasov