Sentences with phrase «golden gate raptor»

exclaims Allen Fish, director of the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory.
FLIGHT OF DEDICATION: VOLUNTEERS DEVOTE 25 YEARS OF SERVICE Golden Gate Raptor Observatory Celebrates Citizen Science at California's Major Raptor Migration Site
And for over 25 years, hundreds of Bay Area volunteers have tracked the numbers and movements of these magnificent birds, often considered indicators of healthy ecosystems, and set up the first and only bird of prey monitoring system in California at the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory (GGRO).
To gather valuable data, Golden Gate Raptor Observatory volunteers and staff identify and count the various species that fly by.
We at the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory (GGRO)-- a Parks Conservancy program in cooperation with the National Park Service — can help you «meet» your raptor counterpart, eye to hawk - eye!
«I like to think that «where a roller coaster used to stand» refers to Playland by the Beach next to the Cliff House, and this eagle is one of the dozens that migrate past Hawk Hill each fall,» says Allen Fish, director of our Golden Gate Raptor Observatory — which does most of its work on and around Hawk Hill in the Marin Headlands.
Golden Gate Raptor Observatory >> GGRO studies the seasonal movements of birds of prey in the Marin Headlands.
• Counted more than 20,000 birds of prey annually, at the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory.
With the National Park Service and Presidio Trust, the Conservancy has provided volunteer and public education programs, including the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory, Native Plant Nurseries, Park Stewardship, and Trails Forever.
For over 30 years, the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory (GGRO) has been a program of the Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy in cooperation with the National Park Service.
The mission of the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory (GGRO) is to study migrating birds of prey along the Pacific coast and to promote public awareness of the state of raptor populations.
Each February, the Golden Gate Raptor Obesrvatory (GGRO) recruits field and outreach interns for the following fall migration season.
The Golden Gate Raptor Observatory (GGRO) is 30 years old this fall (you might even say it's peeking into middle age).
The Golden Gate Raptor Observatory (GGRO) uses long - term volunteer - powered research programs to track the fall migration of raptors through the Marin Headlands.
Established Golden Gate Raptor Observatory in cooperation with National Park Service; GGRO becomes a pioneering «citizen science» program that trains volunteers as hawk counters, banders, and trackers
For over thirty years, the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory's 300 + team of volunteer scientists have counted and banded raptors on fall migration.
The Golden Gate Raptor Observatory turns 30 this fall.
Match your personality type with your bird - of - prey doppelgänger — and then find out how you can potentially spot your feathered friend while volunteering for the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory during the upcoming fall migration.
What does all this have to do with our work at the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory (GGRO), a program of the Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy in cooperation with the National Park Service?
In autumn, hawks moving south are funneled over Hawk Hill in the Marin Headlands, where the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory conducts long - term citizen science projects in an effort to monitor the populations of birds of prey.
Peak Week is the mini-season of absolute high - count, high - banding days each year at the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory.
The Golden Gate Raptor Observatory coordinates volunteers to monitor and track the autumn raptor migration over the Marin Headlands.
The 30th season for the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory — a Parks Conservancy program in cooperation with the National Park Service — was quieter than most, but with some shining highlights.
About 40 students and interns from the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory (GGRO)-- a Parks Conservancy program in cooperation with the National Park Service (NPS)-- took on the nitty gritty details, from handling projectors and chauffeuring field trips to selling T - shirts and answering questions.
Follow the trials and triumphs of a Golden Gate Raptor Observatory intern, as told through several encounters with a particularly mysterious species of raptor — the Northern Harrier.
Laura joined the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory as a volunteer bander in 2010, while participating in a wildlife management internship through the Park Service on Alcatraz Island.
Director, Golden Gate Raptor Observatory Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy 201 Fort Mason San Francisco, CA 94123 E-mail: [email protected] Phone: (415) 331-0730
Visit the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory to learn more.
Beaming faces were abundant on Hawk Hill during the fall 2014 migration season, which featured plenty of «celebrity» raptors, a loopy Redtail, a bald eagle flyby, and 300 intrepid Golden Gate Raptor Observatory volunteers.
Program Manager, Operations, Golden Gate Raptor Observatory Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy 201 Fort Mason San Francisco, CA 94123 E-mail: [email protected] Phone: (415) 331-0730
This spring, we are recruiting both new banding and hawkwatching volunteers to start the 2014 migration season with the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory.
«It is also a chance to celebrate and recognize the citizen science that is happening every day — in the native plant nurseries, at the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory, across our stewardship and resource programs and throughout the parks.»
Interested in studying hawks, falcons, and eagles as a volunteer with the Golden Gate Raptor Observatory?
Just over 1,300 (3.6 %) of these birds have been subsequently re-found, showing us exactly where some Golden Gate raptors have traveled — painting a beautiful map of dots from northern British Columbia to central Mexico, and from Idaho to the Farallon Islands.

Not exact matches

The GGRO, a volunteer - driven program of the Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy, monitors and bands raptors during their fall migration to assess the health of bird populations.
Raptors >> Many species of raptors inhabit the Golden Gate National Parks; GGRO research programs study hawks in the Marin HeaRaptors >> Many species of raptors inhabit the Golden Gate National Parks; GGRO research programs study hawks in the Marin Hearaptors inhabit the Golden Gate National Parks; GGRO research programs study hawks in the Marin Headlands.
Hawk Hill >> Overlooking the Golden Gate Bridge, San Francisco, the Marin Headlands, and the Pacific Ocean, Hawk Hill is one of the parks» signature viewpoints and a prime spot for seeing migrating raptors.
Peering through binoculars, a flock of volunteer raptor watchers perched high in the Marin Headlands reacts excitedly to a pair of peregrine falcons swooping through the Golden Gate.
Overlooking the Golden Gate Bridge, San Francisco, Marin Headlands, and the Pacific Ocean, Hawk Hill is one of the park's best viewpoints and a prime spot for observing migrating raptors.
The first such program on the West Coast, this week the raptor observatory will wind down its 30th year of activity as a project of the Golden Gate National Parks Conservancy and the National Park Service.
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