See familiar birds in a brand new light and beautiful slow motion.
View in browser

Click to visit birds.cornell.edu, the Cornell Lab's main website

Cornell Lab eNews

Jan 11, 2025

 

Click or tap to watch teh first episode of Backyard Birds Revealed

Image by Tim and Russell Laman.

Enjoy The Beauty of Backyard Birds in Our New Video Series

On cold winter days, birds bring liveliness and joy into your backyard. In a new video series filled with super-slow-motion and up-close footage, we invite you to cozy up to titmice, chickadees, nuthatches, and more. Each episode explores a different facet of how birds survive and thrive in your backyard. Dive into the first episode of Backyard Birds Revealed and watch everyday birds in a new light!

 

Backyard Birds Revealed is made possible by Wild Birds Unlimited.

Tap or click to read about bird gains in northeastern Brazil

Gray-breasted Parakeets by Jesús Moo Yam.

Bringing Birds Back to a Brazilian Forest, One Species at a Time

In the 1800s, birds and trees gradually disappeared from Brazil's Aratanha Mountains as plantation agriculture spread across the region. In time, the farms dwindled and forest reclaimed the mountains. Can biologists help the birds return, too? Read about some of their early successes in this article from the latest issue of Living Bird magazine. 

Click or tap to reveal the mystery species

Mystery bird by Gerald Romanchuk / Macaulay Library.

What Bird Is This?   

In the cold months, this spunky species from eastern North America takes to younger, open woodlands—in contrast to the mature forests where it nests—and becomes easier to find. Listen for a quiet barking call, similar to a Song Sparrow, and watch for quick mouselike movements along fallen logs and upturned roots in the understory. Do you know the species?

Walk leader Adé Ben-Salahuddin regards an "early" bird. Photo by Nicholas St. Fleur.

Bird News and Resources

 

Be a Part of Positive Change! Calling all land trusts and conservation orgs: Apply for small grants (10K to 25K) to fund projects that help birds. The deadline for proposals is March 1, 2026. Apply now. 

 

Advances From Our Hub of Bird Discovery: Get an insider's look at the technological advances and people-powered highlights of the past year from the teams at eBird, Merlin, the Macaulay Library, and Birds of the World. 

 

#BirdArtWeek2026: Bird Academy is celebrating with special savings on all of our creative courses. #BirdArtWeek2026 begins on January 18 on the Cornell Lab's Instagram page. 

 

Intro to Drawing Birds: Join us for a virtual, real-time tutorial with science illustrator Liz Clayton Fuller. Saturday, January 24, at 3:00 p.m ET. Sign up now. 

 
Attend a Bird Festival: Festivals are a great way to enjoy birds and meet like-minded people. See our bird festival directory.
Facebook
Instagram
cornell-lab-logo-full-white

The Cornell Lab of Ornithology is a membership institution dedicated to interpreting and conserving the earth’s biological diversity through research, education, and citizen science focused on birds.

 

You received this email because you are subscribed to Lab eNews from Cornell Lab of Ornithology.

    Cornell Lab of Ornithology, 159 Sapsucker Woods Rd.,  Ithaca,NY,14850,

    Unsubscribe or Manage Email Preferences

     

    cornell-seal-white