Sunday, 28 June 2026
FLYWAYS—HOW OUR MIGRATORY BIRDS TRAVEL TO US AND BACK AGAIN BY BIRDLIFE INTERNATIONAL
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Hi John,
Last week, we shared that BirdLife has been helping protect birds for more than 100 years. Today, we want to show you how that work happens.
Migratory birds connect landscapes, countries and even continents through their incredible long-distance journeys.
As they travel to and from their breeding grounds, birds use routes known as ‘Flyways’.
Protecting a Flyway means protecting a chain of places birds need to rest, feed and survive as they cross continents.
That takes local action, science and global teamwork. Across our Partnership, people are restoring habitats, working with communities, monitoring birds and protecting the sites migratory species depend upon.
Click here to read Akshita’s story from Lake Natron, Tanzania
Click here to find out how Hólmfríður stays optimistic protecting Iceland’s wetlands
Click here to see how Tareq monitors migratory birds in the Jordan Rift Valley
All these stories show that it takes careful, long-term work, and it is only possible because supporters like you help make it happen. Thank you.
Best wishes,
Mairianne Walker | BirdLife International Supporter Care team
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