Shrubland Birds: How We Work

Helping protect priority shrubland birds.

Shrubland bird banding. Photo: Charley Wilkinson/Audubon Vermont

Audubon Vermont's Shrubland Bird project enhances habitat for priority bird species breeding in the shrublands of the Champlain Valley. As part of National Audubon's Working Lands Initiative, this project works to protect priority bird species in the Champlain Valley of Vermont.

The Champlain Valley is part of an international, multi-state Bird Conservation Region which extends from the lower Great Lakes through the St. Lawrence River Valley and west to the Lake Champlain Basin. It contains some of the most important grassland, shrubland and wetland bird habitat in the East. In partnership with Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), US Fish & Wildlife Service Partners for Wildlife Program, and Vermont Department of Fish & Wildlife Habitat Stamp Program, Audubon engages people to manage land in ways that protect priority bird species in the region.

Vermont's Champlain Valley is a mosaic of fields, clay-plain forests, wetlands, lakes and rivers that host a diversity of breeding birds. These bird species are attracted to the valley because of its regionally unique habitats, including open farmlands, shrub patches, large emergent marshes and the Lake itself.  
Breeding bird surveys have shown that the early successional grasslands and shrublands of the Champlain Valley are a globally important resource for birds throughout the hemisphere.  Many relatively common birds in Vermont are declining throughout their range, however. 

Top threats to birds in the Champlain Valley:

  • Declining habitat due to abandoned farms and development
  • Changes in agricultural practices, especially the timing and frequency of haying grasslands
  • Invasive species such as wild parsnip, common buckthorn, Japanese honeysuckle, spotted knapweed, and reed canary grass

Rather than waiting for species such as the Eastern Towhee to become vulnerable and end up on a threatened or endangered species list, it is important to take action now to conserve birds in the core of their range. The advantage to this approach is that low-cost management activities, education, and monitoring can help maintain or increase the populations of these birds. 

What we do

We work directly with landowners, foresters, municipalities, and other partners to support early successional habitat management that benefits a suite of priority birds in the Champlain Valley and along the Atlantic Flyway. 

We provide:

  • Technical assistance for landowners and land managers
  • Workshops and trainings
  • Demonstration habitat management sites

This program is funded in part through grants from the National Fish & Wildlife Foundation (NFWF), the South Lake Champlain Fund, and other private foundations.  For more information, please contact Mark LaBarr at [email protected] or Margaret Fowle at [email protected] or (802) 434-3068.

Learn more about the Champlain Valley Bird Initiative

The Bobolink Project
Bird And Bee Friendly Farming

The Bobolink Project

Linking farmers and birders together to support bird-friendly agricultural practices

Read more

Champlain Valley Bird Initiative Demonstration Sites

Golden-winged Warbler

Latin:  Vermivora chrysoptera

Illustration for Golden-winged Warbler

Eastern Towhee

Latin:  Pipilo erythrophthalmus

Illustration for Eastern Towhee

Bobolink

Latin:  Dolichonyx oryzivorus

Illustration for Bobolink

American Woodcock

Latin:  Scolopax minor

Illustration for American Woodcock

How you can help, right now