Kaziranga National Park, Assam
Conservation Tourism
Bird of the Day: Elegant Euphonia
Bird of the Day: Brown-backed Solitaire
Bird of the Day: Grey Francolin
Bird of the Day: Yellowish Flycatcher
Bird of the Day: Pale-billed Woodpecker
Bird of the Day: Grasshopper Sparrow
Bird of the Day: Common Myna
Bird of the Day: Collared Trogon
Bird of the Day: Seaside Sparrow
Bird of the Day: Ferruginous Pygmy Owl
Bird of the Day: Magpie-lark
Bird of the Day: Horned Guan
Bird of the Day: Baltimore Oriol
Bird of the Day: Painted Bunting
Bird of the Day: Brown-hooded Parrot
Bird of the Day: Brown-backed Solitaire
One More Reason We Care About Clean Water

Owner of a fly-fishing lodge worries about fracking: His business can’t survive without clean water.
Thanks to Yale Climate Connections for one more reminder of how many reasons, big and small, we should care more about water:
Why the owner of a Montana fly-fishing lodge is worried about fracking
His business can’t survive without clean water.
Wade Fellin runs a fly-fishing lodge near Montana’s Big Hole River, an area renowned for the sport. Continue reading
Bird of the Day: Forest Kingfisher
Beloved Beasts, Author Interview
My interest in the history of conservation started with the discovery of an archive full of hotel guide books from earlier centuries, which led to another archive full of data about one of the earliest publicly-funded conservation projects, which in turn led to my doctoral dissertation. My particular interest is in the history of both conservation and tourism and their co-evolution over the past century. And this interest seems to run in the family, which might explain where our family’s various entrepreneurial activities have emerged from. All along the way, science writers have been a favorite source of nourishment. I can better understand Michelle Nijhuis‘s two-year hiatus from our pages thanks to Rachel Fritts, Editorial Intern at Audubon magazine, in this author interview:
Capturing the Whole History of Conservationism—for Better and Worse
In her new book ‘Beloved Beasts,’ author Michelle Nijhuis chronicles a movement dedicated to the ‘preservation of possibility.’
Veteran science journalist Michelle Nijhuis has been writing about conservation for more than two decades. Her work on topics ranging from climate change to humans’ relationships with other species regularly appears in publications such as the New Yorker and The Atlantic. In her hotly anticipated new book, released March 9, Nijhuis sets out to tell the definitive history of the effort she dedicated her career to chronicling.
Beloved Beasts: Fighting for Life in an Age of Extinction turns an exacting eye on the history of conservationism, emphasizing the movement’s interconnectedness and complexity. Nijhuis takes the reader on a journey through time, from the plains bisons’ brush with extinction in the 1800s, to the community conservancies preserving wildlife in modern-day Namibia. Continue reading




















