Conserve NH Birds

Photo credit: Rebecca Suomala

What You Can Do to Help Conserve New Hampshire’s Birds

Whether you’re a bird watcher, landowner, business owner, or community official, there are ways you can help New Hampshire’s birds. This section highlights actions we can take as enlightened and concerned citizens to help ensure all of New Hampshire’s birds are here for generations to come.

Conservation Goals

Conservation Goals Graph

In the context of trends and threats to New Hampshire’s birds, there are three overarching conservation goals:

Reverse species declines

These species need our help, and we need to implement a diverse array of actions to ensure they remain on the landscape. We also want their populations to recover to the point that they are no longer conservation priorities.

Keep common species common

Just because a species is currently increasing or stable doesn’t mean it always will be. Declines in common species may be early indicators of unforeseen environmental problems. Maintaining healthy habitat for widespread species will also benefit the rarer or declining ones that co-occur.

Gather critical baseline data

Many rare or secretive species have unknown trends, and as a result we don’t always know their true conservation status. If they’re declining we’ll need to start thinking about possible conservation actions, but in the absence of more information it’s impossible to set priorities.

Each goal applies to groups of species showing similar population trends. All actions listed in the following contribute to these goals.

As an Individual

New Hampshire State House in Concord, NH
New Hampshire State House in Concord, NH

Advocate for:

Beach closures for nesting shorebirds are a common management tool, including in New Hampshire, where they serve to minimize disturbance to Piping Plovers. Photo credit: Pam Hunt
Beach closures for nesting shorebirds are a common management tool, including in New Hampshire, where they serve to minimize disturbance to Piping Plovers. Photo credit: Pam Hunt

Help close the knowledge gaps here at home

You don’t need to be an expert to contribute to research on New Hampshire birds. Helping gather data as a citizen scientist can be as simple as counting birds at your feeder or watching swallows nest on your barn.
After habitat loss, predation by domestic cats is the most significant threat to birds in North America. Keeping cats indoors can prevent unnecessary bird deaths, and also makes for safer and healthier pets. Photo credit: Pam Hunt
After habitat loss, predation by domestic cats is the most significant threat to birds in North America. Keeping cats indoors can prevent unnecessary bird deaths, and also makes for safer and healthier pets. Photo credit: Pam Hunt

Protect birds against predators and disturbances

Men spraying pesticide chemicals on a plant

Avoid Toxic Chemicals

Avoid using pesticides and herbicides; if you currently have pesticides, dispose of them at a household hazardous waste collection day.

Placing something on the outside of windows, such as these “zen curtains,” can significantly reduce the number of bird strikes. Photo credit: Unity Dienes
Placing something on the outside of windows, such as these “zen curtains,” can significantly reduce the number of bird strikes. Photo credit: Unity Dienes

Make your home, yard, and community bird friendly

A commercial building with reflective glass
The majority of collision mortality comes from birds hitting buildings, and not just the windows. Photo credit: Pam Hunt
An Audubon Society of New Hampshire coffee mug sitting on top of coffee beans with the Bird Friendly Smithsonian logo on top
Photo credit: Rebecca Suomala

Protect birds on wintering grounds

Group of people wearing winter coats and hats looking through binoculars birdwatching
Photo credit: Pam Hunt

Support bird research and monitoring

Support local and regional land conservation efforts and the organizations behind them

Plastic bottles and trash on the sand of a beach

Reduce Plastic Pollution

As the Owner or Manager of Forest Land, Farmland, or a Wetland Habitat

Wildlife clearings or ‘patch cuts’ can be effective ways to benefit early successional (shrubland) bird species. Pictured is part of a 10-acre opening at NH Audubon’s Popple Island Wildlife Sanctuary in Epsom, NH. Photo credit: Phil Brown
Wildlife clearings or ‘patch cuts’ can be effective ways to benefit early successional (shrubland) bird species. Pictured is part of a 10-acre opening at NH Audubon’s Popple Island Wildlife Sanctuary in Epsom, NH. Photo credit: Phil Brown

UNH Cooperative Extension provides numerous resources on managing land for wildlife including a very helpful series of brochures on habitat stewardship for several different types of habitats. They also offer landowners free advice on forest management issues.

As a Community Official

As a Business Owner/Leader

Buildings with extensive glass facades pose the greatest risk to birds, especially when near important habitats or migration routes. If the glass cannot be altered, turn off unnecessary lights, especially at night, and apply materials to exterior glass surfaces to break up the reflection. Photo credit: Pam Hunt
Buildings with extensive glass facades pose the greatest risk to birds, especially when near important habitats or migration routes. If the glass cannot be altered, turn off unnecessary lights, especially at night, and apply materials to exterior glass surfaces to break up the reflection. Photo credit: Pam Hunt
Most Cliff Swallows nest on buildings in New Hampshire. Because they are a threatened species, it is important not to disturb them during the breeding season. Photo credit: Pam Hunt
Most Cliff Swallows nest on buildings in New Hampshire. Because they are a threatened species, it is important not to disturb them during the breeding season. Photo credit: Pam Hunt

Information for the species profiles on this website was compiled from a combination of the sources listed below.

  • The Birds of New Hampshire. By Allan R. Keith and Robert B. Fox. 2013. Memoirs of the Nuttall Ornithological club No. 19.

  • Atlas of the Breeding Birds of New Hampshire. Carol R. Foss, ed. 1994. Arcadia Publishing Company and Audubon Society of New Hampshire

  • Birds of the World. Various authors and dates. Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology.

  • Data from the Breeding Bird Survey

  • Data from the Christmas Bird Count