Categories: NewsPhilly

Audubon's TogetherGreen Fellowship Philly Recipient!

The National Audubon Society (with support from Toyota) recently awarded TogetherGreen Fellowships to 40 of the nation’s most promising conservationists – one of whom is representing Philadelphia!  Keith Russell has been protecting birds and wildlife for over two decades with fellow Philadelphians. 

Keith started the Philadelphia Mid-Winter Bird Census which includes a reservoir in Fairmount Park – and will soon be the site of a new Audubon Center where locals can learn, enjoy and work our city’s nature. 

The TogetherGreen Fellowship (part of the TogetherGreen Conservation Leadership Program) is designed to assist individuals with great potential to help shape a brighter environmental future.  Fellows receive specialized training in conservation planning and execution, the chance to work and share best practices with gifted conservation professionals, and assistance with project outreach and evaluation.  Additionally, each Fellow will receive $10,000 towards a community-focused project to engage local residents in conserving land, water and energy, and contributing to greater environmental health.

During Keith’s fellowship he’ll be organizing a study on bird migrations and urban effects.  Specifically, volunteers with be collecting data on bird collisions with building windows, combining citizen science and wildlife conservation efforts through the current migration seasons.  This study will help reveal how building lights and glass in downtown Philadelphia affect many of the migratory birds that pass through our city each spring and fall, allowing Russell (and others) to work towards a safer place for these winged travelers.

Turning off lights and reducing the transparency and reflection caused by building glass will help protect these birds from deadly collisions, educate community members and business owners about the perils migratory birds face in cities, and ultimately help slow the rate at which many of these species are now declining.  A great side-effect will hopefully initiate further environmental awareness across the city so residents can reduce their electricity use.

Check the full list of Fellows efforts – They’ll help people and wildlife around 39 cities in 24 different states.

 For more info, visit TogetherGreen or check them out on Facebook.

Posted by Julie

Julie Hancher

Julie Hancher is Editor-in-Chief of Green Philly, sharing her expertise of all things sustainable in the city of brotherly love. She enjoys long walks in the park with local beer and greening her travels, cooking & cat, Sir Floofus Drake.

Recent Posts

Moving Fast and Breaking Climate goals: What Pennsylvania’s Data Center boom means for local communities

$90 billion in investments could reshape the energy landscape, but community voices and renewable alternatives…

4 days ago

Trash competition, government shutdown, November elections, & more

Catch up on the latest sustainability news:  Block by Block launches citywide cleanup competition with…

4 days ago

From coal to solar affordability: PA’s next energy chapter shaped by HB 504

Farmers and city residents alike stand to benefit from local, homegrown power, says Land &…

5 days ago

Celebrating Solar at “Sun Day,” trash burning ban proposed & more

Catch up on the latest sustainability news:  Philly mobilizes for Sun Day solar energy celebration.…

2 weeks ago

You can be exposed to PFAS through food, water, even swimming in lakes – new maps show how risk from ‘forever chemicals’ varies

Drinking water isn’t the only way people are exposed to PFAS today. This article is…

2 weeks ago

Building connections: How Ash Richards uses land care as cultural preservation

The city’s Director of Urban Agriculture talks about the impact of history, gardening as collective…

2 weeks ago