Image: The Ultimate Bird Drawing Throwdown Showdown Graphic featuring images of David Sibley and H. Jon Benjamin

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Illustrator David Sibley and actor H. Jon Benjamin will face off in the bird illustration battle of the century during BirdNote's Year-end Celebration and Auction!

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Shows With Contributions by Conor Gearin

A Great Blue Heron strides across a grassy field, its long neck and sharp pointed beak balanced over very long legs as it walks

Great Blue Herons on Land

Throughout much of North America, the Great Blue Heron graces waterways, ponds and lakes. They’re built for hunting fish and amphibians along the water — so it might be a surprise to see one stalking across a field, not a drop of water in sight! But sometimes herons leave the water to…
A small brown bird, its white breast streaked with brown, perched on a twig while singing

Song Neighborhoods

Birds of the same species don’t always sing exactly the same as each other. But those that live near each other sometimes have similar songs. Scientists refer to this pattern as a song neighborhood. It’s less like a regional dialect among people that’s found over a large area. It’s more…
Close up of a light brownish red feather, showing the closely aligned individual barbs that grow out from the shaft

What Makes Feathers Both Strong and Light

Bird feathers are famously light, but they’re also strong, holding up under tricky flying and high winds. They’re made of beta keratin, a tougher version of the keratin that makes up human fingernails and hair. They also have an intricate branching structure that makes them highly flexible…
An orange and black Monarch Butterfly and a white lined sphinx moth on blossoming milkweed plant in sunlight

Milkweed: A Whole Ecosystem on a Plant

Milkweed plants are important to Monarch butterflies, which depend on milkweed to raise their caterpillars. But Monarchs aren’t the only ones who benefit from milkweed. Scientists once documented hundreds of insect species they found eating some part of the common milkweed plant –…
An adult Canada Goose walks across a sunlit grassy area, with a dozen goslings walking along with it

Grounded Geese

In spring and summer, the paths around local ponds might have some fluffy obstacles: young goslings along with their caring and defensive parents. Adult Canada Geese lose their flight feathers for several weeks in the summer, often while they’re raising a brood of goslings. Without the…
A female Wood Duck swims across smooth water, her soft brown plumage accented by blue feathers on her wings

Music of a City Lake

A city lake is one of the most prized places in a fast, growing environment. It’s also often difficult to distinguish all of the bird calls from each other. With a splash of a beak, a glide of a wing, and an eye of a predator — listen closely, and then again to sharpen your bird ear…
A graphic with the Bring Birds Back artwork on the right side and a photo of Bill McKibben on the left side.

On Time, Age and Climate Change with Bill McKibben

This season has been all about the mutual impact birds, humans and nature have on each other. To close it out, Bill McKibben joins us for an honest chat about the future of this dynamic, which inevitably includes the planet Earth. His book debut, “The End of Nature,” first sounded the…
Episode promotional graphic for Bring Birds Back: Reimagining Prison Pt. 2: Rehabilitating Butterflies and Minds featuring the podcast artwork and headshot of guests, Mary Linders, Kelli Bush, and Ray Dunning from left to right.

Reimagining Prison Pt. 2: Rehabilitating Butterflies and Minds

This is part two of our series on the Sustainability in Prisons Project. We encourage you to listen to Part 1 before listening to this episode. Tenijah learns all about Sustainability in Prisons Project’s most successful program to date: rehabilitating the federally endangered Taylor’s…
A bright yellow bird with brown streaks on its breast is singing while perched on a branch

Yellow Warblers in a Changing World

In spring and summer, Yellow Warblers sing from treetops to stream sides. While their beauty and songs commonly light up our most vibrant months, they face imminent challenges. Yellow Warbler populations have adapted genetically to their local climates. That makes them vulnerable to…
A pair of Scarlet Macaws perch on a branch with their backs to the viewer, and their colorful wings outstretched

World Rainforest Day

Tropical rainforests are stunning places. Despite covering a small part of the Earth’s surface, they support half of the world’s biodiversity. The variety of lifeforms stands out visually in stunning color, and in sound through the strange and beautiful calls of birds. Today is World…