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Audubon Magazine

Speak up for birds, sea turtles, and pedestrians at Cape Hatteras National Seashore

We need your help fighting the latest threat to wildlife and pedestrians at Cape Hatteras.

Share the beach

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Check out some of the amazing birds that nest on the beach in North Carolina.

Audubon Magazine

Statement from Conservation Groups on CHAPA Lawsuit Against Rules for Responsible Beach Driving in Cape Hatteras National Seashore

February 10, 2012—The following is a statement from Audubon North Carolina, Defenders of Wi...

Saving Lake Okeechobee

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Journey with Everglades advocate Nathaniel Reed to Florida's Lake Okeechobee.

Audubon Magazine

National Park Service finally issues rules for responsible beach driving in Cape Hatteras

On January 20, 2012, the National Park Service announced new rules to manage off-road vehicles ...
Audubon Magazine

Visit the Audubon NC blog

Our blog offers news from the front lines of bird conservation.
Audubon Magazine

Audubon NC Newsletters

Our newsletter is printed three times a year and is delivered to members of National Audubon So...
Audubon Magazine

Cape Hatteras: A National Seashore for All

Decades of unregulated beach driving have pushed the birds at Cape Hatteras National Seashore â...

Audubon North Carolina Wind Power Development Position

Audubon North Carolina (ANC) supports the implementation of the North Carolina Energy Policy, e...
Audubon Magazine

Issues and Policy

Audubon North Carolina works for science-based policies protecting our forests, wetlands, river...
Audubon Magazine

Take the Good Egg pledge to share the beach with nesting birds

The goal of the Be a Good Egg project is to help people learn more about birds like Least Terns...

Pungo-Pocosin Lakes Important Bird Area

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In this video, Curtis Smalling, Important Bird Area Coordinator for Audubon NC, takes you on a tour of the Pungo-Pocosin Lakes Important Bird Area (IBA).This area is home to tens of thousands of wintering waterfowl including upwards of 100,000 Snow Geese, Tundra Swans, and other waterfowl. The site supports 80,000 to 100,000 waterfowl during an average winter.