Audubon staff, including Mark LaBarr, Conservation Program Manager with Audubon Vermont, conduct Piping Plover surveys on the Joulter Cays, a stretch of uninhabited islands in The Bahamas, Wednesday, Feb. 6, 2019.
Audubon staff, including Mark LaBarr, Conservation Program Manager with Audubon Vermont, conduct Piping Plover surveys on the Joulter Cays, a stretch of uninhabited islands in The Bahamas, Wednesday, Feb. 6, 2019.
Careers in Conservation

Atlantic Flyway

Career Opportunities in the Atlantic Flyway
Audubon staff, including Mark LaBarr, Conservation Program Manager with Audubon Vermont, conduct Piping Plover surveys on the Joulter Cays, a stretch of uninhabited islands in The Bahamas, Wednesday, Feb. 6, 2019. Photo: Photo: Walker Golder
Audubon staff, including Mark LaBarr, Conservation Program Manager with Audubon Vermont, conduct Piping Plover surveys on the Joulter Cays, a stretch of uninhabited islands in The Bahamas, Wednesday, Feb. 6, 2019. Photo: Photo: Walker Golder
Careers in Conservation

Atlantic Flyway

Career Opportunities in the Atlantic Flyway

A Flyway as Diverse as the People Who Live in It

The Atlantic Flyway encompasses some of the hemisphere’s most productive ecosystems, including forests, beaches, and coastal wetland.
The Atlantic Flyway is home to a wide variety of ecosystems—and more than a third of the human population of the United States. Protecting birds and their habitats from human activity and the threat of sea-level rise is at the forefront of Audubon’s mission in this flyway. Shorebird monitoring programs from New York to the Bahamas ensure beach-nesting species, including the Piping Plover and American Oystercatcher, have safe places to rear their young.In eastern shrublands and woods, the Golden-winged Warbler and Bobolink benefit from Audubon’s habitat restoration efforts and our partnerships with private landowners to increase sustainable land management. By integrating the efforts of chapter volunteers, centers, state offices, and local landowners, Audubon is making the entire Atlantic Flyway a better place for birds and people.

State Job Boards

Current Projects

Delaware River Watershed​ - overing 13,500 square miles and four states—Pennsylvania, New York, New Jersey and Delaware—the Delaware River Watershed is a diverse landscape of more than 35 ecological systems and 185 natural communities.

Everglades Ecosystem - As the only conservation organization working throughout the ecosystem, Audubon’s goal for the Everglades is to reestablish colonies of wading birds that have been displaced by drainage, development, and dirty water.

Long Island Sound​ - More than 10 percent of Americans live within 50 miles of Long Island Sound. Audubon is leading an ambitious effort to restore the Sound’s health in a way that supports populations of priority waterbirds and shorebirds while balancing the needs of nature and people.

Eastern Grasslands & Shrublands - Atlantic Flyway birds that depend on grassland and early successional shrubland habitats have experienced significant population declines. 

Eastern Forests - Audubon enlists landowners and foresters to help support birds that depend on forested landscapes along the Atlantic Flyway, training them in bird-friendly forestry practices and promoting legislation that provides incentives for forest preservation.

Saltmarsh​ - Audubon Maryland-DC and its partners are working to help imperiled saltmarsh birds adapt to sea-level rise threatening coastal marshes along Chesapeake Bay. 

Opportunities

Internships and Fellowships
Careers In Conservation

Internships and Fellowships

Internship and Fellowship Opportunities

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Careers in Conservation
Careers in Conservation

Careers in Conservation

Source for information of careers in the conservation field

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