News

ALBUQUERQUE — Laura Banks, president of the nonprofit Bird Alliance of Central New Mexico, spoke about migratory birds to a nearly full audience at Los Poblanos Historic Inn & Organic Farm.
Birds passing through New Mexico during migration season Migration season is in full swing, with up to 10 million birds passing through in a single night. Here’s how you can help keep them safe.
Dead birds have also been reported in Colorado, Texas and Mexico. Martha Desmond, a professor at New Mexico State University’s department of fish, wildlife and conservation ecology, called the ...
As work is being done to conserve the remaining bird populations, the New Mexico Department of Game and Fish proposed revisions to the The Migratory Game Bird Rule (19.31.6 NMAC), the statue that ...
Early this month at a scenic wetland in dry central New Mexico, ... the next steps for the birdwatchers would be to try to explain how the South American bird made it all the way up to New Mexico.
Biologists at New Mexico State University are trying to find out why hundreds of thousands of migratory birds have been found dead across the state. The mystery started August 20 with the ...
ALBUQUERQUE — Huge numbers of migratory birds are dropping dead around New Mexico as scientists scramble to determine what is triggering one of the Southwest’s largest bird die-offs in recent ...
Austin Fisher, an independent journalist in northern New Mexico, posted a video Sunday on Twitter of what he said were more than 200 dead birds he found while on a tubing trip. I just recorded ...
A flock of migrating birds, mostly European Starlings shown in 2005 in San Antonio, New Mexico. (Heather Forcier/AP) Scientists don’t know why hundreds of thousands of birds are dying off in the ...
New Mexico researchers develop wildlife observation drones from dead birds The research team at New Mexico Tech has constructed and tested pheasant, mallard duck and pigeon drones and robots.
[1/2] A view of a taxidermy bird drone for wildlife monitoring developed by researchers at New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology in Socorro, New Mexico, U.S. March 22, 2023.
A team of New Mexico researchers is reverse-engineering dead birds and turning them into drones. Researchers at the New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology in Socorro, led by Dr. Mostafa ...