Hummingbird Organizations and How you Can Get Involved

Hummingbird Organizations
A few trusted non-profit Hummingbird conservation networks work to help restore, maintain, and support the hummingbird populations all across the Americas; this includes the The Hummingbird Society, the Hummingbird Monitoring Network, the American Bird Conservancy and the National Audobon Society.

Throughout the globe, Hummingbirds are struggling to adapt to the ever-changing landscape. From pesticides, urbanization, habitat fragmentation, and climate change; Hummingbirds are in trouble. If you would like to help make positive changes in the hummingbird ecosystem, consider volunteering and donating to these organizations.

Check out just a few of these conservation efforts below, and learn how you can lend a hand. If you don’t have any extra cash to donate, don’t worry! There are also volunteer opportunities listed below.

The Hummingbird Society

The mission of the Hummingbird society is geared toward the conversation of Hummingbirds. Their focus lies primarily on teaching about Hummingbirds and why conservation efforts are so essential to ensure that these little birds don’t end up on the endangered species list.

If you want to get involved with the Hummingbird society, you can donate to their monthly or pledge a donation in someone’s honor. For $50 US dollars a month, donors will receive:

  • Subscription to their monthly E-newsletter about the Organizations work
  • Member certificate,
  • Hummingbird care information,
  • Bumper sticker
  • Calendar

In addition to their great work, they also hold their annual Sedona Hummingbird Festival in Sedona, Arizona. At this festival, experts talk about Hummingbird conservation efforts and banding, offer tours, provide a marketplace, and hold a gala banquet.

Hummingbird Monitoring Network

Hummingbird Monitoring Network

The Hummingbird Monitoring Network takes a hands-on approach to the conservation of Hummingbirds. They work to protect the ecology and habitats of various species of Hummingbirds worldwide, from the Ruby-Throated Hummingbird to the Calliope Hummingbird. Some of their most outstanding achievements include:

  • Address threatened species of Hummingbirds and ways to help
  • Mitigating habitat loss and fragmentation (chopping up forests into urbanized neighborhoods)
  • Speaking out against the use of pesticides and boosting biodiversity
  • Restoring native plants to urbanized areas to help provide Hummingbirds with better food sources and diverse ecosystems

You can opt to donate to the Hummingbird Monitoring Effort to help their cause or get directly involved! Their banded monitoring program offers many volunteering positions where you can help band, monitor, and get involved in creating migration maps. This organization is a great way to help with more than just a monetary donation.

If you want to stick with a monetary donation, the Hummingbird Monitoring network has many ways to ensure that your dollars go to the right places. Instead of joining a monthly cause, they allow you to pick where your money goes. You can opt for a flat donation or help fund a specific project. With low administrative costs, you feel good that your donation will go to the right cause!

Other Organizations Worth Investing In

Other Organizations Worth Investing In

While the above-listed Organizations are two of the best (and trusted) non-profit organizations geared toward the conversation and help of Hummingbirds specifically, other bird-related charities help all threatened birds, including Hummingbirds. Some fantastic bird charities include the American Bird Conservancy and the National Audobon Society. These secure and trusted conservation organizations help all kinds of birds.

How To Help Hummingbirds In Other Ways

While donating or volunteering to a National Organization is a wonderful idea, there are other things that you can do to help Hummingbirds at a local level. Sometimes, the most significant steps start in your small circle of influence. Some other things that you can do to help include

  • Start a local Hummingbird group at your local library or community center that provides ways to help Hummingbirds, such as eliminating the use of pesticides or keeping your feeders clean.
  • Always support funding for local parks and wildlife centers in your town.

The habitats of Hummingbirds may be struggling, but as long as kind-hearted humans are willing to step up to the plate and lend a hand when needed, we can all share this planet in harmony.

Tara Summerville

Tara Summerville is a freelance writer that loves her backyard birdfeeders. She enjoys sitting on her deck with a cup of coffee, watching cardinals, blue jays, finches, and chickadees munch away at her backyard offerings. Her fascination with birds began as a child; spending afternoons at her grandma's house watching and identifying birds. She has since carried her love of songbirds into adulthood and ensures no bird in her yard goes hungry!

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