News

A man stumbled across a 'big grey stone' in a forest and thought nothing of it until it began moving - and he couldn't ...
Robert Stroud, known as the Birdman of Alcatraz, started studying birds while in prison in Leavenworth, Kansas.
Welcome back to the Fluctus Channel. In this episode, we explore the fascinating transformation of decommissioned Navy ships, ...
A Minor League Baseball game in Missouri was delayed when a pair of ducks decided to land on the field and go for a walk ...
A report from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology shows that bird populations across every U.S. habitat are plummeting, with 229 ...
There is great excitement in the studio today. Folks from the Grassland Bird Trust are here to tell us about “Raptor Fest: On the Wing of Migration,” taking place at the Durkeetown Baptist ...
A traffic camera and trooper bodycam footage show the bird standing in the middle of the right lane, looking entirely unperturbed, shortly after 7:45 a.m. (WSP photo) TOPICS: PUYALLUP, Wash.
So the answer to this question really just depends on where you live. In the U.S., we might find it strange that people in the U.K. eat black-headed gull eggs (they’re considered a delicacy).
With a bird-flu-induced egg shortage that has caused prices to skyrocket — and consumers, for lack of a better word, to scramble — the term “egg hunting” takes on new meaning this Easter.
It isn’t for a celebration — it is a warning to turkey vultures. That isn’t the only attempt to get rid of the birds. For a few weeks now, a pair of turkey vultures has made themselves known ...