Help unlock $5,000 in additional support for birds.
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Birds like the Piping Plover have been telling us for quite some time that we must act on climate. They’re already suffering from the effects of planetary warming—effects that will only intensify unless we change course. Right now, a special one-day Giving Challenge means your monthly gift will help unlock $5,000 more for these vulnerable birds—but only until midnight tonight! ([link removed])
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Please make the most of this opportunity now with your monthly gift, and give birds and their habitats the protection they need—not just today, but tomorrow, too. ([link removed])
[National Audubon Society] ([link removed])
[Piping Plover.] ([link removed])
Piping Plover.
Starting now: Special one-day Giving Challenge. Help unlock $5,000. ([link removed])
GIVING CHALLENGE ([link removed])
27 new monthly donors needed to unlock $5,000
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Giving Challenge Deadline: Midnight Tonight
Donate Now ([link removed])
As climate change continues to increase sea-level rise and intensify extreme weather, habitats that birds and other wildlife depend on will grow more inhospitable. For climate-vulnerable birds like the Piping Plover, what matters most is what people like you—people who care about birds and are ready to help—do next.
When you start a dependable monthly gift for birds now, thanks to a group of generous donors, you can help unlock another $5,000 to protect them and the world we all share. We’re counting on 27 monthly donors today to meet this one-day giving challenge. Will you be one of them? ([link removed])
Birds can’t escape the impacts of extreme weather
The Piping Plover is an endangered or threatened species in all parts of their range.
389 North American bird species are at increasing risk of climate extinction.
We’ve lost 3 billion birds in the span of a human lifetime.
For birds like the Piping Plover, the Least Tern, the Black Skimmer, and the American Oystercatcher, sea-level rise and nest washouts from storms and flooding are existential threats. Yet the story of the Piping Plover also proves that where there is action, there is hope: In recent years, they have returned to nest in several sites they had previously abandoned. And research shows that our coastal stewardship is key to this recovery. It comes down to this: Where we work—and when you power this work with generous giving—birds are better off.
We’re counting on your steadfast support to protect birds and the places they need—not just today, but tomorrow, too. So please, start your monthly gift before midnight and help unlock $5,000 more to safeguard birds and the places they need. ([link removed])
Sincerely,
Sarah Rose, Vice President of Climate
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Photo: Cole Parks/Audubon Photography Awards
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