feedback-button.jpg

Let us know what you're thinking

support-your-refuge.gif
get_involved.jpg

JOIN OR RENEW YOUR MEMBERHIP HERE

BECOME A SUSTAINING MEMBER OF AUDUBON

EVERSAVE ACTIVATION FORM

edprograms2010cover.jpgSCHOOL PROGRAMS

 

 


PROGRAM UPDATE
Winter Birding at Sachuest Point on Saturday, January 27 is full and we cannot accept anymore participants.

 

eWing

Find out what's
going on at Audubon,
Sign up for eWing

What's Going On?

Leaving Audubon in your will

 hlc_web_brochure_page_1.jpg

1% for the Planet

partner_badge_200x50_white.png

Audubon Search

Home arrow Current Issues
Rhode Island Rarities

Barn Owl usbr.gov.jpg

The Fight to Save
our Native Species

Not just a crisis in Amazonian rainforests, species rarity is a worldwide and local conservation crisis.  Here in Rhode Island, there are many rare, endangered and threatened species that are vulnerable for a multitude of reasons.  (Anne - pull and put in italics, larger?)

Some species are naturally rare. The keen observer and naturalist Charles Darwin in On the Origin of Species (1859) concluded, "Rarity is the attribute of a vast number of species in all classes, in all countries." And two and a half centuries later, few species tend to be overwhelmingly common. Many will never carpet the state or be seen on every foray into the field.

In nature, rarity may be a product of restricted geography or very specific habitat requirements, small population sizes or a combination of these factors.  Habitat destruction and invasive species, the top two threats to biological diversity worldwide, exacerbate the dilemma of rarity. Some species are just more vulnerable. Giant pandas with their dietary and habitat specificity will always be rare. Birds of declining coastal grasslands are likely to be rare in the Northeast.

Read more... [Rhode Island Rarities]
 
Ecological Makeover in Kingston

Conservation land owned by Audubonis monitored, and managed when necessary, to ensure that the features thatfirst made the land environmentally special are perpetuated. Rather than acreagebeing preserved as museum pieces, vulnerable to "benign neglect," we recognizethat Audubon land is dynamic. New challenges arise every year such as invasivespecies -- a worldwide threat to native biological diversity. We are currentlyaddressing and restoring the land surrounding our Kingston Wildlife ResearchStation.

Ongoing Orchard and Hayfield Restoration

Goals: Onegoal of restoring approximately 6-acres of orchard and hayfield at the KingstonWildlife Research Station (KWRS) in South Kingstown, is to increase mist netcapture rates of birds migrating through Rhode Island in the fall.  Declining representation of certain birdspecies may be correlated with increasing invasive woody species (e.g.,honeysuckle, multiflora rose, autumn olive) at KWRS. An overarching goal at KWRSis to bring back a small part of what the property looked like during activemanagement.

Read more... [Ecological Makeover in Kingston]
 
<< Start < Prev 1 2 Next > End >>

Results 6 - 7 of 7

Advertisers are not afiliated with the Audubon Society of Rhode Island

© 2012 Audubon Society of Rhode Island
12 Sanderson Road, Smithfield, RI 02917 ~ 401-949-5454
Powered by Joomla Designed, developed and hosted by LeftBrain LLC