Naturally is a bi-weekly column about birding on the Cape written for the Herald by staff at the New Jersey Audubon. While ...
CAPE MAY, N.J ... that 20 percent of the bird poop samples they brought back with them contained influenza viruses, and they realized the area was an ideal observatory to track flu viruses ...
On his first trip to the Delaware Bay in 1985, Webster and his team found that 20 percent of the bird poop samples they ... the St. Jude team arrived in Cape May this year, H5N1 had turned up ...
That’s driven by a history of harassment of the species, said Brett Ewald, director of the Cape May Bird Observatory, part of New Jersey Audubon. “Owls are a very sensitive species,” he said ...
There'll be a movement of snowy owls further south than they normally occur," Brett Ewald, of the Cape May Bird Observatory, told NBC10. “They're gonna do what they need to to survive ...
Dr. Robert Webster and Dr. Pamela McKenzie take samples of bird poop on Reeds Beach, New Jersey. - CNN After they finished in Cape May, Kercher drove the mobile lab to the Peace River in northern ...