
Jennifer Bogo
Content Vice President at Audubon
Science journalist. Bird enthusiast. Fan of space but very into saving Earth. EIC, Audubon mag & VP, Content @audubonsociety. Formerly orbited @popsci @popmech.
Articles
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1 month ago |
audubon.org | Jennifer Bogo
Juvenile Brown Pelicans aren’t exactly cooperative—like any tween they’re instantly recalcitrant when faced with authority. “One volunteer had their hat stolen by a pelican that was resisting being captured,” says photographer Madeline Gray, who tagged along with a field research team in North Carolina. But you’d never know it from this issue’s cover star: a young bird perched in its habitat with an air of quiet equanimity, coolly appraising its visitors on a late-summer day.
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Dec 13, 2024 |
audubon.org | Jennifer Bogo
As we were preparing this issue, we asked Christmas Bird Count participants for their favorite memories from the annual community science effort. Our inbox soon flooded with birds. There was the “duck-nado,” thousands of waterfowl strong. Barred Owls arriving in a moonlit woods with the startling thwack of talons on wood. A rare Yellow-breasted Chat seen through the slush. Collected over the count’s 125-year history, these anecdotes are more than snapshots in time.
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Sep 22, 2024 |
audubon.org | Jennifer Bogo
As we were working on this issue, my six-year-old discovered the joy of Calvin and Hobbes. I would hear him cackling gleefully as he devoured a collection of the comic strips. The cartoon, chronicling the adventures of a boy and his stuffed tiger friend, also sparked delight in a young Rosemary Mosco. She carried that love of the funnies with her through life and today is a celebrated cartoonist, creating comics that fuse humor with science.
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Jul 27, 2024 |
audubon.org | Jennifer Bogo
Our publication's look and even its name have changed over time, but for more than a century, some things have remained constant: our delight with birds and our focus on helping readers enjoy and protect them. Palabras de Jennifer Bogo Vice President, Creative and Editorial In 1899, when the first issue of this magazine hit the presses, hundreds of thousands of birds were being killed for sport and fashion.
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Jul 22, 2024 |
audubon.org | Jennifer Bogo
In 1899, when the first issue of this magazine hit the presses, hundreds of thousands of birds were being killed for sport and fashion. Gulls were made into muffs, eggs were collected like stamps, and a solid life list could be tallied by surveying women’s hats. Much has changed since then. Audubon societies, which numbered just 15 at the time, multiplied and banded together with the help of the new publication.
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We knew this little lady had star power from the moment we saw her. Like @asme1963's tweet to cast your vote for Milagra, a baby condor photographed by @KarineAigner, as best magazine cover of the year!

Tell your readers to vote, @audubonsociety! The most likes win Readers' Choice Awards. Voting ends April 1 at midnight. https://t.co/1IKnA3TzDT

This is a great opportunity for early-career journalists! SHERF fellows also have the opportunity to join @sejorg and attend its spectacular #sej2024 conference.

Applications are open for #SHERF — The National Science-Health-Environment Reporting Fellowships — a development program for early-career journalists interested in covering any or all of the three fields. Deadline to apply: Feb. 23, 2024, at 6 p.m. ET. https://t.co/BgOIIFVI0A https://t.co/pvrg0XSRTz

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