Audubon • December 2014
As Los Angeles officials reconsider how to settle the Owens Lake dust, conservationists are concerned about how wildlife might fare.
Read MoreAs Los Angeles officials reconsider how to settle the Owens Lake dust, conservationists are concerned about how wildlife might fare.
Read MoreCalifornia bans rat poisons that are killing the state’s birds, but the fight isn’t over.
Read MoreTwo hundred miles north of Los Angeles, windswept Owens Lake was the victim of one of the most audacious water grabs in the history of the American West.
Audubon groups are saving birds from open-ended PVC mining stakes.
Read MoreA year after Japan’s nuclear meltdown, scientists are investigating the effects of radiation exposure on birds, other wildlife, and plants.
Read MoreThe Opal Creek wilderness, just two hours from Portland, is one of the Pacific Northwest’s last uncut old-growth forests.
Read MoreA makeover turns manmade Aramburu Island into rich wildlife habitat.
Read MoreRed, white and green–the wine industry is widely embracing chemical-free viticulture that protects both the landscape and farmers
Read MoreNew funding protects more than 62,000 acres on a California Ranch.
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