Surprise! We have been organizing something special from the shortgrass prairie: the inaugural and first annual Southern Plains Birding Festival! 🌾🦉
Tickets ($40) are for sale now!!! Get your tickets and additional info at southernplainsbirdingfestival.org
Posts by Nicholas Sly
The bottom line is global biodiversity loss isn’t driven by one dominant threat. It’s the combined, cumulative pressure of multiple drivers. To halt vertebrate declines, conservation must tackle them together. 🌍
#Biodiversity #ConservationScience
IMAGE SHOWS GRAPHIC OF CORNELL LAB OF ORNITHOLOGY PHYLOGENY EXPLORER TOOL.
MAJOR NEWS! We just launched an awesome new tool! The illustrated Birds of the World Phylogeny Explorer lets users trace any bird’s lineage, compare species relationships, and explore major evolutionary milestones with a click of a button. SHARE and EXPLORE! birdsoftheworld.org/bow/news/phy...
Photo montage of Tinamus resonans sp. nov., a new species of tinamou from the montane forests of the Serra do Divisor, western Amazonia, Brazil. The species is distinguished by a unique combination of plumage pattern, vocal repertoire, and ecological characteristics, including a conspicuous dark slate facial mask, vivid rufous-cinnamon underparts, and a uniform brownish-gray back. Its vocalizations are remarkable, consisting of long and powerful songs that echo strikingly across the steep montane slopes, producing a characteristic resonant effect. The species was documented exclusively at higher elevations within a transitional zone between submontane and stunted forests, where the understory is densely structured by root mats. A preliminary population estimate, based on field detections and spatial extrapolation, suggests approximately 2,106 individuals restricted to the Serra do Divisor massif. Although no immediate anthropogenic pressures were observed within its range, the species may be highly vulnerable to climate change and to proposed infrastructure projects that threaten the integrity of this federally protected region. The discovery of T. resonans highlights the biological uniqueness of the Serra do Divisor, reinforces its status as a center of montane endemism, and underscores the critical importance of maintaining its long-term conservation.
Huge News from the Western Amazon: it's the year 2025 and we are still describing entirely new, strikingly-distinctive large-bodied bird species! Behold Tinamus resonans sp. nov. the Slaty-masked Tinamou mapress.com/zt/article/v... #Ornithology @tetzoo.bsky.social 🪶
Who is in Wales at the European Ornithological Congress #EOU2025 this week? We are! Please stop by the booth and see Shawn and Nick and ask about the exciting things happening with Birds of the World and our partner network.
Start page screenshot.
🦅 The new unified global #avian #taxonomy #AviList has just been released at www.avilist.org! Xmas for anyone interested in #birds & checklists... The first version will be followed by annual updates, with decisions and processes aimed to be more transparent than its predecessors'. 🪶🧪
🧵
If your genAI tool will create content that must be double-checked by experts in order to be usable, safe & accurate ... it's probably easier & cheaper to just hire the experts to create the damn content in the first place.
Nation Can't Believe It On Harvard's Side
you might think N American species are getting common at their north range limit and rare at their south range limit as temps get warmer
but you would be wrong
new paper in GEB w/ @eliotmiller.bsky.social & Matt Strimas-Mackey, eBird Status & Trends ftw
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10....
An old tree stumps with plates marking the age of various rings. The plates read from center out: germination of this tree. 66 million years ago: last triceratops. 385 BCE: Diotima’s ladder. [missing]. 3020: third trans president. Felling of this tree.
I found this tree stump in an Ithaca park with year markers for the various tree ring ages. Who knows what the missing year is?
Two red efts, one large and one small, crawl across forest litter
A tiny orange red eft walking on leaf litter
I found many little orange friends in the woods today. I love them so much.
The cover of the book “Orchid Growing for Wimps” featuring a balding man with a thin mustache and plaid shirt posing with two potted lady’s slipper orchids.
Used book store find of the day: when this cheerful man posed for a photo with his orchids, do you think they told him what the book title would be?
"North American bird declines are greatest where species are most abundant"--a stark, timely reminder of just how important conservation measures are. We need to save birds before it's too late. New research out by Cornell Lab of Ornithology & @abcbirds.bsky.social www.science.org/doi/10.1126/...
BHL is essential for my work. I hope it finds a good new home! #ILoveBHL
It’s still wild to me how some Paphs are so shiny waxy they don’t even look real. I’m going to have to try one at some point.
No flowers yet, but I got Oncidium Sharry Baby ‘Sweet Fragrance’, Tolumnia Jairak Rainbow ‘Strawberry’, and a Psychopsis for my growing office collection. Super happy to have these again.
Epidendrum Miura Valley, sprays of many smaller pink flowers.
No name but one of the pansy type orchids, flat and maroon with cream and dark purple centers
No name on this one. Crinkled orange and yellow flowers.
Brassolaelia Petite Star. Yellow narrow petals and a broad yellow lip with small maroon spots.
Alright last one for now.
Forgot the name of this one. Yellowish flowers with dense fine dark purple spotting.
Purplish flowers with yellow centers and white reticulations
Tolumnia Jairak Firm ‘Pink Lady’. A wide pink and white lip with complex yellow, maroon and white patterning on the rest.
Paph. farianum
More fun orchids (forgot some of the names)
Psygmorchis pusilla. A miniature orchid with a leaf rosette mounted on bark and a yellow flower.
Cattleya intermedia var. orlata ‘The Bob’. A bright array of many light lavender and darker purple flowers.
Paphiopedilum hybrid, glossy lady slipper flower with reddish and yellow and some darker spots and white fringe.
Phrag. Naukana Kealoha, a delicate pinkish lady slipper
Minis, cattleyas, lady slippers
Orchid display with many fancy flowers of various colors
Orchid display with many fancy flowers of various colors
Orchid display with many fancy flowers of various colors
Orchid display with many fancy flowers of various colors
The award winning displays are always worth drooling over
Paphiopedilum hybrid, glossy reddish with yellow and white fringing
Orchid time! I just got back from the spring show by the Genesee Region Orchid Society in Rochester. I only bought three new ones and that was showing restraint. I didn’t take as many pics as I should have but here’s some highlights.
A river otter swimming
An otter arching its back in mid dive
The tail of a diving otter flipping above the surface
An otter head raising a mouthful of prey (a big fish?) above the waters surface
River Otters make any morning better.
Congrats!!
Calling all researchers, conservationists, & habitat biologists! We’re collecting insights from users for grants/reports. How does Birds of the World impact your work? That is, what do you use BOW for, and what does it provide that other resources cannot? DM or email birds@birdsoftheworld.org - TIA!
A gray Jeffersons Salamander crossing wet grass and ice
A Jefferson’s Salamander crawling across grass and ice towards the camera
50 degrees and raining? It’s salamander time
That’s my favorite hoodie! I haven’t had the occasion to wear it while gulling in quite a while. Maybe I better go look for the local “Iceland Gulls” before they leave.
A black chicken-like bird drawn from an 1880s manuscript.
If you have access to Birds of the World, my first chapter on a bird there was just published after a good deal of work.
The Tristan Moorhen was a flightless rail that lived only on Tristan in Tristan da Cunha in the south Atlantic.
1/n
Last bird of 2024: Wild Turkey
First bird of 2025: Carolina Wren
A screenshot of weather radar full of rain and snow
Starting off 2025 right: walking for miles in rain and snow for a CBC