Join us Friday, May 29 at 3 p.m. ET for a Webinar on how to help save Red Knots and horseshoe crabs.
National Audubon Society
The Importance of Horseshoe Crabs for Migratory Birds
A Red Knot on sand near the ocean.
Spring migration is underway, and that means two species are meeting up all along the Atlantic Flyway—Red Knots and horseshoe crabs. Thousands of these ancient crabs come ashore every May to spawn, and shorebirds like Red Knots rely on horseshoe crab eggs to fuel their 9,000-mile-journey from the tip of South America to Arctic Canada. But both species are in peril.

Join us Friday, May 29 to learn more about what we can do to help save Red Knots and horseshoe crabs. The webinar will be streamed via Zoom and Facebook Live.

Speakers include:


  • Walker Golder, Atlantic Flyway Coast Program Director, National Audubon Society
  • Robert LaFrance, Policy Director, Audubon Connecticut
  • Kaitlyn Parkins, Senior Conservation Biologist, New York City Audubon
  • Larry Niles, Wildlife Biologist, Wildlife Restoration Partnerships
Click below to register for the webinar, and if you don’t already follow the National Audubon Society on Facebook, click here to like our page.
Event Details
The Importance of Horseshoe Crabs for Migratory Birds
Friday, May 29, 2020
Webinar
3 p.m. ET | 2 p.m. CT
RSVP
Red Knot. Photo: Brian Kushner/Audubon Photography Awards
CONNECT WITH US
FacebookTwitterInstagramLinkedInYouTube
National Audubon Society
225 Varick Street, New York, NY 10014 USA
(844) 428-3826 | audubon.org

© 2024 National Audubon Society, Inc.

Update your email preferences or unsubscribe