The American Birding Podcast – Details, episodes & analysis
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The American Birding Podcast
American Birding Association
Frequency: 1 episode/9d. Total Eps: 399

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See allScore global : 42%
Publication history
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09-46: The Feather Detective with Chris Sweeney
jeudi 13 novembre 2025 • Duration 36:28
Smithsonian researcher Roxie Laybourne may be the most influential ornithologist you've never heard of. Over the more than half a century she was a pioneering figure in the fields of forensics and aviation, all through her work with birds, and, more specifically, their feathers. Her incredible life is documented by journalist Chris Sweeney in the book, The Feather Detective: Mystery, Mayhem, and the Magnificent Life of Roxie Laybourne, released earlier this year. Chris joins us to talk about Laybourne's legacy in fields that go far beyond birds.
Also, the big eBird update is here and our lists are looking a lot different this week. What does this mean for our muddled taxonomic authorities in North America?
Subscribe to the podcast at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts and please leave a rating or a review if you are so inclined! We appreciate it!
09-45: Dating Like a Bird with Bryony Angell & Wenfei Tong
jeudi 6 novembre 2025 • Duration 39:46
Can the various mating rituals, displays, and behaviors of birds apply to the lives of humans in the 21st Century, with our own uniue rituals, displays and behaviors? It's a question that birder and writer Bryony Angell asks as she approached her own renewed dating life in an article The Migratory Suiter, published in the most recent issue of BWD. In doing so, she enlists the help of Dr Wenfei Tong. author of Bird Love: The Family Life of Birds, to compare the respective courtship drama of birds and humans.
Also, Nate is back from the ABA's latest Community Weekend! Learn more about these fun free ABA events!
Subscribe to the podcast at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts and please leave a rating or a review if you are so inclined! We appreciate it!
09-36: Where Have the Gray-headed Chickadees Gone with Brad Meiklejohn
jeudi 4 septembre 2025 • Duration 41:59
Gray-headed Chickadee is certainly one of the most enigmatic species of breeding birds in the ABA Area. Though it is found broadly across northern Eurasian it was, until very recently, also known from an isolated breeding population in northern Alaska and far northwestern Canada. Those bird, long a bucket list objective for ABA Area birders, might be gone, and the reasons for that are unclear. Alaska birder and conservationist Brad Meiklejohn explores their disappearance in the Lost on the Frontier: The Mysterious Disappearance of North America's Rarest Breeding Bird, published in the July 2025 issue of Birding magazine, and he joins us to talk more about this avian mystery. Stay tuned for a publicly accessible version of this article.
Also, the auction featuring some of our past Bird of the Year cover art is up and running!
Subscribe to the podcast at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts and please leave a rating or a review if you are so inclined! We appreciate it!
07-48: Secrets of Slow Birding with Bridget Butler
jeudi 30 novembre 2023 • Duration 39:08
If there's one thing that 2020 taught birders, its how to appreciate your immediate surroundings. The cancellation of festivals, international trips, and even many local bird walks and meetings encouraged us to be more present and local. It's something that Vermont naturalist Bridget Butler has been pushing for a long time as part of her "Slow Birding" initiative. She joins host Nate Swick to talk about how birding can create a connection to yourself and the place where you live.
Also, cicadas have unseen impacts on eastern forests and birds are to blame.
Subscribe to the podcast at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts and please leave a rating or a review if you are so inclined! We appreciate it!
07-47: This Month in Birding - November 2023
jeudi 23 novembre 2023 • Duration 01:03:51
This Month in Birding is The American Birding Podcast's monthly round table discussion on all things birds and birding. This month features Jennie Duberstein, Tim Healy, and Ryan Mandelbaum covering bird name changes, universal alarm calls, what makes a bird attractive to humans, and more.
Links to article's discussed in this episode:
North American Birds Will No Longer Be Named After People
Improving the language of migratory bird science in North America
What drives our aesthetic attraction to birds?
Subscribe to the podcast at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts and please leave a rating or a review if you are so inclined! We appreciate it!
07-46: Random Birds, Vol 9, with Ted Floyd
jeudi 16 novembre 2023 • Duration 56:27
Host Nate Swick is on the road, but that doesn't mean you won't get new content! Birding editor Ted Floyd is back again for another edition of Random Birds, the most fun you can have with a bird list and a random numbr generator. This time around Nate and Ted take discuss ducks, tanagers, sparrows and much more!
Subscribe to the podcast at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts and please leave a rating or a review if you are so inclined! We appreciate it!
07-45: Talking Lumps - Western Flycatchers with Alec Hopping
jeudi 9 novembre 2023 • Duration 42:54
One of the biggest taxonomic changes of this year was the long-anticipated lump of the species formerly known as Pacific-slope and Cordilleran Flycatcher back into Western Flycatcher. It's a story with all the taxonomic highs and lows packed into a slightly confusing and cryptic package. Alec Hopping is a birder and researcher whose article in North American Birds called Unraveling Western Flycatchers; A Case Against the Split played a large role in making the case to the relavant authorities. He joins us to talk about how to get a species lumped.
Also, the AOS makes a huge announcement regarding birds named specifically for people.
Subscribe to the podcast at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts and please leave a rating or a review if you are so inclined! We appreciate it!
07-44: Meet Wayne Klockner, the ABA's New Executive Director
jeudi 2 novembre 2023 • Duration 36:25
This past summer, the ABA brought on our new Executive Director. Wayne Klockner comes to us after a long career with The Nature Conservancy in Maryland and beyond, with efforts that have led to the conservation of thousands of acres of natural areas, the restoration of commercial and shell fisheries and the establishment of TNC's climate strategy. He lives and birds in Ocean City, Maryland, and it is our pleasure to welcome him to the podcast.
Also, amazing new science suggests that albatrosses use infrasonic ocean noise to orient themselves.
Subscribe to the podcast at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts and please leave a rating or a review if you are so inclined! We appreciate it!
07-43: This Month in Birding - October 2023
jeudi 26 octobre 2023 • Duration 54:51
This Month in Birding is The American Birding Podcast's monthly round table discussion on all things birds and birding. This month features Martha Harbison, Mikko Jimenez, and Dexter Patterson covering the USFWS's recent extinction news, Takahe reintroductions, birding at night, and the panel's spookiest birds.
Links to article's discussed in this episode:
21 Species Delisted from the Endangered Species Act due to Extinction
As city heat rises, bird diversity declines
How L.A.'s bird population is shaped by historic redlining and racist loan practices
Prehistoric bird once thought extinct returns to New Zealand wild
Here's How You Go Birding in the Middle of the Night\
A Southern Giant Petrel to haunt your nightmares
Subscribe to the podcast at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts and please leave a rating or a review if you are so inclined! We appreciate it!
07-42: The Wingsnappers with Barney Schlinger
jeudi 19 octobre 2023 • Duration 36:38
Manakins are among the most unique and fascinating neotropical bird families with displays that run the gamut from group line-dancing to bizarre percussive feather snaps. One species, in particularly, has long fascinated UCLA researcher Barney Schlinger, the Golden-collared Manakin of Panama and western Colombia. It is the subject of his book The Wingsnappers: Lessons from an Exuberant Tropical Bird and he joins host Nate Swick to talk about it.
Also, the eBird taxonomy update is coming! What does it mean for our ABA lists?
Subscribe to the podcast at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts and please leave a rating or a review if you are so inclined! We appreciate it!









