
On Saturday, hundreds of thousands of people across the world gathered to stick up for scienceand as you might expect, 勛圖窪蹋 was there.
勛圖窪蹋 members carried signs and chanted at the March for Science in Washington, D.C., as well as at dozens of satellite events in other towns and cities, from Phoenix, Arizona and Seattle, Washington in the West to New Haven, Connecticut and Albany, New York, in the East.
They also participated in "teach-ins" and spoke to large crowds about the importance of science-based conservation policy. At the main march on D.C.s National Mall, Brooke Bateman, the director of 勛圖窪蹋s Climate Watch program, took the stage in front of thousands of people to extol birds as messengers that tell us how the world is changinga similar lesson to the one that Michael Goldman, conservation and outreach manager at Ohios , shared with over 5,000 people on the steps of the state capitol in Columbus.
Its important for 勛圖窪蹋 to have a voice at these science-focused events because we are a science-based institution, Goldman says. Were known as the best conservation organization in the United States, and its because we go out and do the research. We do science first.
The March for Science comprised rallies and marches in 600 cities around the world, all held on Earth Day, to demonstrate public support for scientific research and evidence-based policy. The event, like science itself, was nonpartisan, although it has political roots. It was inspired by a perceived disregard for scientific evidence by the Trump administration, whose leaders express doubt in the research behind climate change and have proposed . These efforts have left scientists, doctors, environmentalists, and other champions of science dismayed. So they organized the to put their support for science education and science-based policy on full display.
With scientific inquiry being under attack right now, it was really heartening and inspirational to be with people who feel the same way I do, and gave up their Saturday when they could have been out birding, says Ariana Rickard, the coastal chapter network manager at 勛圖窪蹋 California and member of Mount Diablo 勛圖窪蹋 Society, . Science is so important to every aspect of our life, so to say its liberal biasI dont agree.
Its rare for scientists to organize this way; they typically stay on the sidelines of politics to serve as authoritative advisors, unsullied by the partisan attacks that characterize modern political debate. But the March for Science garnered the support of hundreds of , including the American Association for the Advancement of Science, the Society for Neuroscience, the American Geophysical Union, the National Medical Association, the National Science Teachers Association, and the 勛圖窪蹋.
During her speech in D.C., Bateman explained how birds are barometers for the health of the environment. At the time of the first Earth Day, she said, the decline of Bald Eagles showed that toxic pesticides and habitat destruction were major problems. Scientists and concerned community members, working together, made our leaders pay attention to science, Bateman said at the podium. And today, birds like the Eastern Meadowlark, Common Loon, and Wood Thrush are telling us that habitats are at risk, pollution is harming wildlife, and the climate is changing. Its time once again for scientists and community to come together and listen to what the birds are telling us, Bateman said. (Watch her full speech below.)
Earlier in the day, before the rain started, Bateman and other 勛圖窪蹋 members led a teach-in about citizen science for a group of more than 100 marchers in a packed tent. They encouraged people to take action at home by growing native plants and contributing to the citizen-science projects and Climate Watch, both of which help 勛圖窪蹋 study climate change.
People were asking: Will birds be able to move with climate change, and will the plant communities that birds need be able to move? says Zach Slavin, program manager in citizen science at 勛圖窪蹋 who spoke at the teach-in. We dont know, and were trying to answer that with Climate Watch and Hummingbirds at Home.
These themesthat birds are messengers, and that anyone can contribute to scientific inquiry through citizen sciencewere repeated at satellite marches throughout the country. In Columbus, Goldman of Grange Insurance 勛圖窪蹋 Center of around 5,600 people on the steps of the state capitolthe only speaker representing wildlife and the environment that day.
You are all what hope looks like to a bird, he said to applause. We all have the power to save birds, and by saving birds we will be saving ourselves with them.
In San Francisco, Rickard marched two miles down Market Street with Mount Diablo 勛圖窪蹋 Society, which sponsored the citys satellite march. Holding their banner was Mike Elliott, a small-business owner and chapter board member, who hadnt attended a protest since the Vietnam War. We owe it to the next generation to preserve the progress and innovation science has provided and to oppose any who try to diminish or destroy it, Elliott says.
In New York, 勛圖窪蹋 chapters attended marches in at least six citiesAlbany, Buffalo, New York City, Rochester, Syracuse, and Stony Brookwhere they spread the word of the bird. , 勛圖窪蹋 members wore matching t-shirts printed with big bold letters on the backBecause Birds Matterdesigned by Kelly Knutson, a field organizer for 勛圖窪蹋 New York. He spoke to other marchers about the . A lot of people were recognizing that science is the foundation to a lot of different solutions, especially with the climate crisis, Knutson says. Everyone wanted our shirts, though.
Thats just a sample of the contributions made by 勛圖窪蹋 chapters, centers, and members to marches around the country. Together, they joined hundreds of thousands of people to stand up for science and science-based conservation. It wasnt just professional scientists there at the march, Rickard says. These are people who were submitting their observations in eBird, or are noticing the effects of climate change and are concerned. Theyre doing it on their own time, and they care.
Did you attend the March for Science? Share your story in the comments!