OWEB Invests in Oaks
The Oregon Watershed Enhancement Board made a significant investment in oak and prairie this year with two major grant awards to local partnerships.
Learn MoreThe Oregon Watershed Enhancement Board made a significant investment in oak and prairie this year with two major grant awards to local partnerships.
Learn MoreOur friends at Tualatin Soil and Water Conservation District share how grazing cattle show potential as a tool to restore native prairies–but there is still more to learn.
Learn MoreThe Fender’s blue butterfly relies on open prairie habitats. It is currently endangered, and its most frequent host plant, Kincaid’s lupine, is threatened. Conservation actions that help one species often help another and also help maintain biodiversity.
Learn MoreOakBirdPop is an interactive tool developed by Klamath Bird Observatory and American Bird Conservancy that allows users to project changes in bird populations resulting from habitat change, or measure the effectiveness of a restoration project.
Learn MoreA recently conserved, and recently burned, property in southern Oregon harbors many habitats and species of wildlife. The land is undergoing a rapid renewal since the 2020 South Obenchain Fire.
Learn MoreMore than ninety percent of the Pacific Northwest is currently in drought conditions, significantly impacting our ecosystems and people and communities. Oak ecosystems, well adapted for drought, are one bright spot in this climate scenario.
Learn MoreMeet the Acorn Woodpecker, a communal and resident species in oak woodlands (or in urban or residential oaks) in the Pacific Northwest. Their iconic waka-waka call was the inspiration for the raucous call of Universal Studio’s Woody Woodpecker.
Learn MoreThe East Cascades Oak Partnership recently completed their Strategic Action Plan for 2020-2030, a major accomplishment for a group formed in 2017! This plan, with the input from many partners and community members, lays out a multidimensional path forward for oak conservation.
Learn MoreThe Klamath Siskiyou Oak Network (KSON) has already done a lot for oak conservation. Pacific Birds is helping to ensure they have the capacity to keep up the good work.
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U.S. Coordinator: Monica Iglecia
Canada Coordinator: Andrew Huang
(604) 350-1913
General Contact: Info @ Pacific Birds dot org
Bird Habitat Joint Ventures are collaborative partnerships that enhance work in the U.S., Canada, and Mexico to conserve habitat for the benefit of birds, other wildlife, and people. We bring strategic thought to bird conservation.