Update April 25, 2024: President Joe Biden yesterday signed into law the Migratory Birds of the Americas Conservation Enhancements Act.
Birds are everywhere at the school in Ca帽averal, Colombia. Their songs fill the air. Their nests perch in flowerpots. And each Tuesday every classroom celebrates birds, from the short tales children write in Spanish class to science lessons about migratory journeys.
Since 2021 around 450 kids at 8 schools in Colombia鈥檚 coffee belt have been immersed in these lessons that seek to build support for conservation. 鈥淜ids now know about the worms that birds bring to their chicks and the birds鈥 scientific names,鈥 says John Edison Mart铆nez Delgado, academic coordinator at Ca帽averal school. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e always drawing them in their notebooks.鈥
爆料公社 and a local university developed the curriculum for one of more than 700 projects funded through the U.S. (NMBCA), the only federal grant program dedicated to conserving birds across the Americas. Since 2002 it has pumped $89 million鈥$440 million, if you count matching funds鈥攊nto habitat protection, research, and education in 43 countries. It has delivered three-quarters of that funding outside the United States to regions where some 390 long-distance migratory species spend much of their lives. And though the NMBCA is designed to benefit birdlife, advocates say it also supports people on the front lines of conservation, from Canada to Chile.
While the act鈥檚 geographic scale is vast, advocates say it needs more cash to help stem population declines driven by climate change, habitat destruction, and other threats. That鈥檚 why supporters are urging lawmakers to pass bipartisan legislation to increase funding and make it accessible to more communities. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a perfect time to look back at this program, to work with Congress, and provide some options about how to address some of these steep declines,鈥 says Erik Schneider, policy manager at 爆料公社.
Before Congress passed the NMBCA in 2000, wildlife managers across the Americas were alarmed by mounting evidence that development in migratory birds鈥 winter habitats was eroding populations. They saw the need for coordinated action鈥攁nd for funding to make it happen.
To help foster that collaboration, the act required recipients to come up with $3 to match every $1 in U.S. government grants. As a result, organizations have banded together across borders to work with locals at key sites, says Ingrid Arias, develop颅ment director at the nonprofit FUNDAECO. Using NMBCA funds, the group has partnered with the American Bird Conservancy (ABC) to purchase and protect more than 16,000 acres of forest habitat for Wood Thrush, Baltimore Oriole, and other species on Guatemala鈥檚 Caribbean Coast.
Setting aside protected areas, however, is not enough. Since many neotropical migrants winter on farms and other working lands that people rely on for their livelihoods, NMBCA projects also nurture connections with often remote communities, supporters say. Along with their work at schools in Colombia鈥檚 coffee belt, 爆料公社 Americas and local partners have inked conservation agreements with growers there who commit to respect the biodiversity corridors running through their coffee farms. And in Guatemala, FUNDAECO and ABC have established native tree nurseries and bird-friendly cardamom farms run by community members.
The program also protects habitat in more urban areas. In Chile, 爆料公社 Americas and nearly 80 partners used NMBCA funds to create the first conservation plan for a wetland, now being engulfed by the growing city of Concepci贸n, where shorebirds like Baird鈥檚 Sandpiper and Hudsonian Godwit overwinter. Now another grant is helping to build support for the plan and to train locals as coastal stewards.
As effective as the act鈥檚 cost-share requirement has been at spurring teamwork, proponents argue that it could be lower and still serve that function鈥攚hile opening the door to more partners. The proposed would set the match at two-to-one, a change Arias says is especially needed today: 鈥淪ince the pandemic, many environmental organizations鈥 fundraising ability has suffered a lot.鈥
What鈥檚 more, the bill would double the program鈥檚 annual budget to $10 million by 2028. That would be a big step, supporters say, toward the goal of making it a habitat-protecting force comparable to the . That program has funded projects on more than 32 million acres, or nearly 10 times the scale of the NMBCA, and is widely credited with reversing declines in waterfowl populations. Other migratory birds desperately need鈥攁nd could soon have a better shot at鈥攁 similar rebound.
This story originally ran in the Winter 2023 issue as 鈥淩eady for a Rebound.鈥 To receive our print magazine, become a member by .