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    HomeEnvironmentConservationForest once covered the Rio Grande Valley. One man hopes to bring...

    Forest once covered the Rio Grande Valley. One man hopes to bring it back.

    This story was produced by Grist and co-published with the Texas Tribune.

    Jon Dale’s love affair with birds began when he was about 10 and traded his BB gun for a pair of binoculars. Within a year, he’d counted 150 species flitting through the trees that circled his family’s home in Harlingen, Texas. The town sits in the Rio Grande Valley, at the convergence of the Central and Mississippi flyways, and also hosts many native fliers, making it a birder’s paradise. Dale delighted in spotting green jays, merlins, and altamira orioles. But as he grew older and learned more about the region’s biodiversity, he knew he should be seeing so many more species.

    Treks to Santa Ana National Wildlife Refuge, which spans 2,088 acres near the border with Mexico, revealed an understory alive with even more birdsong, from the wo-woo-ooo of…

    Read full article originally published on grist.org

    Grist
    Gristhttps://grist.org
    A nonprofit, independent media organization dedicated to telling stories of climate solutions and a just future.
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