Conservation advances in fits and starts. Some bird populations decline, others bounce back through the hard work of people who protect them. Sometimes, society learns from its mistakes鈥攐ther times, not so much.
In honor of 约炮视频鈥檚 125th anniversary of continuous publication, we compared the magazine鈥檚 historic and current coverage of five core themes, during key snapshots in time. We hope that in another 125 years, humanity has solved it all. But more realistically, we hope in the year 2150, we鈥檒l still be producing journalism that matters to the future of birds, people, and our planet.
Bedrock Protections
1918: The Migratory Bird Treaty Act鈥攁mong the oldest wildlife conservation laws鈥攑rohibits harming or killing protected avian species without prior authorization. Bold women founded the earliest 约炮视频 societies to push for the law, and in the year it passed, Bird-Lore editor Frank Chapman鈥檚 joy was palpable: 鈥淭he National Association is now relieved of the necessity of watching the legislation of every state and of combatting the numberless attempts to legalize the destruction of birds for private gain.鈥 If only it were that simple.
Fast-Forward: Our reporting since then has tracked many attacks the MBTA has weathered, including congressional efforts in 2015 to shield offenders and a 2021 rule seen as the Trump administration鈥檚 attempt to give industry a free pass to cause avoidable avian deaths. (As our headline put it, 鈥淭rump to Birds: Drop Dead.鈥) We have also written about the law鈥檚 success at holding violators accountable: After the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill killed an estimated 1 million birds, for example, BP鈥檚 $100 million fine helped pay for unprecedented conservation work on the Gulf Coast. And we鈥檝e closely followed the progress of recent complementary legislation that strengthens the act against political assaults and across the Americas.
Habitat Safeguards
1932: With habitat loss and hunting causing rapid waterbird declines, Bird-Lore updated readers on what 约炮视频 and affiliated local groups were doing about it: establishing new nature sanctuaries, hiring wardens to patrol them, and advocating for wildlife refuges. With the proposed Everglades National Park before Congress, 15,000 约炮视频 members urged legislators to protect the East鈥檚 鈥渓argest primitive wilderness.鈥 As the Great Depression created funding shortfalls, 约炮视频 called for cooperation with hunters and farmers to save more birds. 鈥淚t is not too late, if we begin now,鈥 10-year-old Thomas Peters wrote in a 1938 essay.
Fast-Forward: Thanks to 1934鈥檚 Duck Stamp Act and other wetland protections, waterbird populations are surging, offering 鈥減roof that conservation efforts work.鈥 But our 2020 investigation found that strapped budgets are testing an 鈥渙verwhelmed and understaffed鈥 refuge system. And even as the nation aims to hit ambitious habitat conservation goals by 2030, legislation to pay for state and tribal wildlife protection remains in limbo. Our coverage of these issues, the (now decades-long) restoration of the Everglades, and 约炮视频鈥檚 growing collaborations to better support all birds throughout their migratory ranges offer a clear message: Declaring an area protected is only the beginning.
Ecological Awakening
1945: After scientists discovered DDT鈥檚 power to kill malaria-carrying mosquitoes during World War II, 约炮视频 was among the earliest to warn of the dangers of the pesticide鈥檚 鈥渋ndiscriminate鈥 use to fight all kinds of farm and forest pests. 鈥淭he insect world is a very ancient one and a highly complex one,鈥 wrote entomologist Herbert F. Schwarz. He feared that the loss of our insect 鈥渁llies鈥 would lead to a 鈥渟ongless and inanimate woodland,鈥 while 约炮视频鈥檚 president urged careful before-and-after studies on the effects of spraying the chemical.
Thus began the magazine鈥檚 drumbeat of coverage as the data became clearer and then undeniable: DDT was poisoning entire ecosystems and moving up the food chain. By the time The New Yorker and 约炮视频 published early excerpts from Rachel Carson鈥檚 Silent Spring, a landmark 1962 book that spurred the mainstream environmental movement, the biggest question left was: What would society do about it?
Fast-Forward: In the time since the newly formed EPA largely banned DDT in 1972, we鈥檝e reported on the remarkable comeback of eagles, falcons, pelicans, and other species. But 约炮视频鈥檚 most recent coverage points to a bigger lesson missed: Despite complex regulations that exist today, chemicals are still put into widespread use before their full societal cost is clear. Plastics and PFAS (aka 鈥渇orever chemicals鈥) are polluting habitats and drinking-water supplies. Widely used insecticides are again killing pollinating insects and accumulating up the food chain, this time in the form of neonicotinoids. Weed killers like dicamba are poisoning rural landscapes. And even after dangerous substances are banned or restricted, loopholes or online markets may allow for their continued use. A common thread? When birds suffer, we do too.
Energy Future
1970: Oil companies had just struck 鈥渂lack gold鈥 in Alaska鈥檚 Prudhoe Bay and were plowing ahead with building an unprecedented pipeline across the tundra. They expected officials to rubber-stamp a permit鈥攗ntil environmentalists used the new National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) to challenge such hubris. In 鈥淜iss the North Slope Goodbye,鈥 George Laycock described efforts to force one of the first environmental impact reviews and called for better safeguarding the nearby Arctic National Wildlife Refuge: 鈥淭ime is short,鈥 he wrote.
Many other headlines keyed in on America鈥檚 insatiable energy appetite, including 鈥淭he Murder of the Southwest鈥 (strip mining for coal), 鈥淭he Last Great Dam鈥 (flooding the scenic Hells Canyon), and 鈥淭empest in a Nuclear Teapot鈥 (building dozens of new reactors). In 鈥淟ive Better Electrically?鈥 Hal Borland laid out a forking path: Solar and wind energy were 鈥渢here for the taking鈥 but so far untapped.
Fast-Forward: An urgent energy transition is finally underway. 约炮视频 now reports on efforts to ensure the safety of wildlife is a priority for renewable energy projects, including through NEPA reviews, proactive siting, and technology and design solutions. Yet as the world runs down the clock on fossil fuels, oil and gas development continues to threaten local communities, sensitive ecosystems, and myriad birds. Our coverage of the decades-long push to drill in the Arctic refuge鈥攁nd its unwavering defense by Indigenous Gwich鈥檌n activists and conservation groups鈥攑oints to why vigilance is necessary: In 2021 officials held the first-ever auction of oil rights there. (Thankfully, we wrote, it was a 鈥渇lop.鈥)
Warming Planet
1990: While the magazine mentioned carbon emissions in the 1970s, we brought the threat to the forefront with our 1990 cover story, which sought solutions to the by-then apparent global warming trend. In it, we explored the promise and potential perils of wind farms, nuclear plants, and algae and corn biofuels. While our early climate coverage focused largely on energy and international agreements, such as Bill McKibben鈥檚 dispatch on the Kyoto Protocol, by the 2000s we鈥檇 begun wrestling with the far-reaching effects of the worsening crisis.
Fast-Forward: Today most stories we publish reflect that climate change and conservation are inextricably linked. We鈥檝e devoted entire issues to the topic, informed by 约炮视频鈥檚 science on how birds will fare in a warming world. We delve into related problems like rising seas, fiercer wildfires, and deadlier storms and also innovative, nature-based solutions. Even as we grapple with the scale of potential loss, stories of resilience and adaptability infuse our pages with hope.
This story originally ran in the Summer 2024 issue as part of a package called 鈥淭ime Flies,鈥 celebrating the 125th anniversary of 约炮视频 magazine. To receive our print magazine, become a member by .