From National Audubon Society <[email protected]>
Subject Only a few hours left before our Earth Day Giving Challenge extension expires
Date April 24, 2023 11:05 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Help unlock $5,000 in additional support for birds.

([link removed])

There are just a few hours left before our Earth Day Giving Challenge extension expires. This powerful opportunity to have your gift go even further by helping unlock an additional $5,000 for birds and our planet ends at midnight tonight.

Give Monthly ([link removed])

Will you be one of the 33 supporters we’re relying on to join us with a monthly gift right away? Please give birds the unwavering protection they need and deserve, today and tomorrow. ([link removed])

[National Audubon Society] ([link removed])

[Rufous Hummingbird.] ([link removed])

Rufous Hummingbird.

Every day should be Earth Day, so there’s one more day to amplify your impact for birds! ([link removed])

GIVING CHALLENGE EXTENSION ([link removed])

33 new monthly donors needed right away to unlock $5,000

-------------------------

Giving Challenge Extension Deadline: Midnight Tonight

Donate Now ([link removed])

Earlier this week, we celebrated Earth Day—honoring and strengthening our resolve to preserve the precious planet we all share. But birds don’t consult the calendar. The unprecedented climate crisis that puts two-thirds of North American bird species at increasing risk of extinction is the danger they face 365 days a year. And the threats confronting familiar favorites like the Golden-winged Warbler and Rufous Hummingbird will only grow…unless you help today.

Will you join us in making every day Earth Day? To encourage caring bird lovers like you to flock together to help birds survive, we’ve extended our special Giving Challenge until midnight tonight. Start your monthly gift today while, thanks to a group of generous donors, your gift will help unlock $5,000 more to help birds weather this code-red climate crisis and protect the places they need. ([link removed])

 

This Earth Day, birds are at a tipping point

More than half of U.S. bird species are in decline.

389 North American bird species are at increasing risk of climate extinction.

3 billion birds have vanished in less than a human lifetime.

 

As you read this, more than half of U.S. bird species are in decline. Of those, 70 species, including the Golden-winged Warbler and Rufous Hummingbird, are at a “Tipping Point”—birds that have lost 50% or more of their populations in the past 50 years and are on track to lose another half or more in the coming decades. The situation is dire. But because birds have been telling us for quite some time that we must take climate action—and because we have listened—we’re already protecting vulnerable birds across every landscape where we work. Thanks to the dedication of members like you, in the last year we’ve helped get the most comprehensive climate-focused bill signed into law, secured record-breaking funding allocated for Everglades restoration, and more.

We’ve made incredible progress, but we must do more while there’s still time to build a safer future for birds. And for that, we need you. We’re counting on 33 more friends to join with a monthly gift during our Earth Day Giving Challenge. Please help unlock $5,000 as we work towards creating a brighter future for the birds we love. Hurry! This extension offer ends at midnight tonight. ([link removed])

Sincerely,

National Audubon Society

Donate ([link removed])

Photo: Evan Barrientos/Audubon Rockies

 

[Facebook] ([link removed])
[Twitter] ([link removed])
[Instagram] ([link removed])
[YouTube] ([link removed])

National Audubon Society
225 Varick Street, New York, NY 10014 USA
(844) 428-3826 audubon.org ([link removed])

© 2023 National Audubon Society, Inc.

Pause fundraising emails for two weeks ([link removed])

Update your email address or unsubscribe ([link removed])
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis