News

WILDCOAST’s Blue Carbon Project is a collaborative effort by diverse partners in Mexico to protect mangroves in the Gulf of California.

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San Diego Natural History Museum is working on a collaborative project to strengthen our understanding of the current status of research and conservation efforts in the Baja California peninsula.

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The Sonoran Joint Venture helped coordinate the annual meeting of the American Ornithological Society, held in Tucson, Arizona in April. The meeting’s theme Celebrating Connections: Birds Across Borders, was the perfect opportunity for the SJV to co-lead a special symposium on binational collaboration for desert bird conservation.

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Soar higher with LightHawk

LightHawk is teaming up with the Sonoran Joint Venture to accelerate conservation success through the powerful perspective of flight. LightHawk is a non-profit organization that mobilizes volunteer pilots, photographers, environmental experts, and storytellers to make images, collect data, inform the public and share their experiences.

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Movements of Sandhill Cranes

With rapidly growing development of wind energy and its associated infrastructure, future impacts on wildlife are poorly understood. Biologist (and SJV board member!) Dan Collins, along with many partners, are working to better understand the movements of the Western Greater Sandhill Crane to inform agencies and land managers on where to target wintering landscapes for conservation.

Two of the fastest declining species in desert habitats are Bendire’s Thrashers and LeConte’s Thrashers. Little is known about these species, which limits the effectiveness of conservation and management actions. The Desert Thrasher Working Group is aiming to change that through a multi-state monitoring program.

The annual meeting of the American Ornithological Society will take place at the El Conquistador Resort in Tucson, Arizona, April 9-14, 2018. The meeting’s theme is Celebrating Connections: Birds Across Borders, and sessions will place special emphasis on research and conservation. The Sonoran Joint Venture is co-coordinating two symposiums at the conference, one of which is free and open to the public.

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We are excited to announce the publication of a new iBook, the Sweetwater Wetlands Wildlife Field Guide. The SJV worked with our partners at The Environmental Education Exchange to help produce this interactive digital guide for Sweetwater Wetlands. Learn more and download your free copy!

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Avicaching Comes to the Southwest

Looking for an exciting resolution to get 2018 off to a good start? Welcome the New Year by trying your hand—along with your eyes and ears—at Avicaching! Created by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Avicaching is simply eBird + Geocaching: searching specific locations to spot as many birds as possible. With geocaching, people go to specific sites to find small treasures. With Avicaching, eBird Hotspots are the locations and the birds are the treasures. But it’s not just a game. The data collected by Avicachers fills in gaps in knowledge and help guide management and conservation decisions. The SJV and our partners are launching the first Desert Avicaching game to learn more about southwest birds. That’s where YOU come in!

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On December 31, 2017, the Sonoran Joint Venture bid farewell to long-time Science Coordinator, Carol Beardmore, who retired after a 27-year career with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and more than forty years working in conservation. Carol joined the SJV staff in 2003. Over the ensuing fourteen years, she developed the strong biological foundation that guides our bird and habitat conservation efforts, created the SJV Science Working Group (formerly the Technical Committee), and has been a driving force for Coordinated Bird Monitoring throughout the SJV region, and especially in Arizona.

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