Fort Collins Science Center

You are here: FORT > Products > Publication: 21699

Making connections for bird conservation: linking states, provinces & territories to important wintering and breeding grounds

Cover image of publication 21699

Product Type: Series

Year: 2006

Author(s): Blancher, P.J., B. Jacobs, A. Couturier, C.J. Beardmore, R. Dettmers, E.H. Dunn, W. Easton, E.E. Inigo-Elias, T.D. Rich, K.V. Rosenberg, and J.M. Ruth

Suggested Citation:
Blancher, P.J., B. Jacobs, A. Couturier, C.J. Beardmore, R. Dettmers, E.H. Dunn, W. Easton, E.E. Inigo-Elias, T.D. Rich, K.V. Rosenberg, and J.M. Ruth. 2006. Making connections for bird conservation: linking states, provinces & territories to important wintering and breeding grounds: Partners in Flight Website Partners in Flight Technical Series, No. 4. http://www.partnersinflight.org/pubs/ts/04-Connections. 13 + p.

Abstract

To effectively conserve migratory landbirds, we need to be involved in conservation beyond our political borders. This has been a central tenet of Partners in Flight (PIF) since the initiative began in 1990 with a focus on Nearctic-Neotropical migrants. Implementation of this concept has also been fundamental to the success of the North American Waterfowl Management Plan (e.g., NAWMP 2004). Actions by individual states, provinces and territories are key to the success of PIF efforts at the continental scale, and great progress has been made in recent years though various initiatives. Currently, U.S. state Wildlife Action Plans are outlining a vast array of actions to benefit priority species. However, it is also very important to take action in regions that support these same species at the other end of their migratory movements, to ensure effective protection year-round (Rappole et al. 1983, Webster and Marra 2005, Elliott et al. 2005). For instance, conservation action is needed on the wintering grounds for many birds that breed in Canada and the U.S. but spend a large portion of their annual cycle in Mexico, the West Indies, Central and/or South America. In this document we use maps to summarize migratory connections between individual U.S. states, Canadian provinces & territories and the regions that support the same birds at the other end of migration. The maps give a general picture of where birds go, providing a starting point for targeting action. With this information in hand, decision-makers can explore partnerships and mechanism that would help further conservation action outside their borders…

Top of Page
Skip navigation and continue to the page title

Accessibility FOIA Privacy Policies and Notices

Take Pride in America home page. FirstGov button U.S. Department of the Interior | U.S. Geological Survey
URL: http://www.fort.usgs.gov/Products/Publications/pub_abstract.asp
Page Contact Information: AskFORT
Page Last Modified: 1:47:55 AM