Working Lands

Habitat Assessment Program and Resources

When available, opportunities will be listed here.
Chestnut-sided Warbler. Photo: Shirley Donald / Audubon Photography Awards
Working Lands

Habitat Assessment Program and Resources

When available, opportunities will be listed here.

Audubon Connecticut's Working Lands program integrates science, education, public policy, and land management expertise to ensure the continued existence of high-quality breeding habitat for forest songbirds along the Atlantic Flyway.

One primary way we have worked toward this goal is to provide bird habitat assessments for landowners, land managers, and communities who wish to protect and enhance habitat for breeding forest birds on the properties they own and/or manage. We are now expanding the reach of this program by training foresters to incorporate “bird-friendly” recommendations into forest management plans for their conservation-minded clients.

What is a bird habitat assessment?

A habitat assessment is a survey of current songbird and forest habitat conditions on your property, conducted by an Audubon conservation biologist and a licensed forester during the spring or summer months. Alternatively, a forester endorsed by Audubon may do a similar assessment independently.

Information about bird habitat can be incorporated into a written report with suggested management options aimed at enhancing, maintaining, and/or creating quality habitat on your property.

There are currently no grant-funded opportunities for forest bird habitat assessments, but you can read about past programs via the links below.

If you have a sugar maple operation, you may also be interested in our Bird-friendly Maple program.

For questions and more information about our Forest for Birds program and assessment opportunities, please contact Eileen Fielding, Director of the Sharon Audubon Center, at eileen.fielding@audubon.org or 860-364-0520, x120, or Rosa Goldman, Forest Associate, at rosa.goldman@audubon.org.

Past habitat assessment programs

1. The Southern New England Heritage Forest woodland assessment project, led by The Last Green Valley, in partnership with Audubon Connecticut and several regional organizations.

2. The Landscape-scale Forest Restoration Grant for Land Trusts, led by Audubon Connecticut with funding from the U.S. Forest Service.

How you can help, right now