For nearly a century the Migratory Bird Treaty Act has been one of the most effective protective tools in the history of wildlife conservation, surviving persistent attacks by exploiters of all stripes (including this latest one). But over the last several decades, human ingenuity has baffled the MBTA’s provisions. Tens of millions of migratory birds die needlessly and horribly every year in collisions with power lines and communication towers, or are lured unintentionally into oil waste pits. That could soon change: In late May, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service issued a series of proposals to help the venerable Act meet some of the challenges its faces in the twenty-first century. 爆料公社 was at the forefront of the campaign when Congress originally passed the MBTA in 1918, and is again pushing to ensure that the plan to strengthen the Act is successful—including meeting with elected leaders and drumming up support from bird lovers of all stripes. As Mike Daulton, 爆料公社...