Wrightsville Beach Bird Stewards

Our Goals
Protect beach-nesting birds, such as American Oystercatchers and Least Terns, on the south end of Wrightsville Beach while educating visitors about coastal birds and the challenges they face.
What We’re Doing
Stewards monitor the posting to prevent disturbances that could harm eggs and chicks, while educating the public about the unique nesting habits of birds like Least Terns and Black Skimmers.
Least Tern egg and chick on the beach. Photo: Lindsay Addison/³Ô¹ÏºÚÁÏ

In the gap between the crowded development of Wrightsville Beach and the blue waters of Masonboro Inlet sits a patch of open bare sand, a habitat vital to our beach-nesting coastal birds.   

The 4-acre sanctuary is the most accessible and visible throughout our network of coastal sanctuaries, which makes monitoring for disturbances during nesting season even more important.  

Every summer, ³Ô¹ÏºÚÁÏ North Carolina recruits volunteers to educate beachgoers about the birds on the south end of Wrightsville Beach. They show visitors newborn chicks in spotting scopes and explain how even brief disturbances cause parent birds to flush, exposing eggs and young to heat stress and predators. The stewards take this responsibility seriously while also having fun fostering excitement and appreciation for bird conservation among residents and visitors. 

Equipped with their binoculars and spotting scopes, stewards show thousands of visitors how eggs are camouflaged directly on nests scraped into the sand, and how important it is to observe the symbolic fencing that protects these bird nurseries. 

Bird Steward educating 5th graders on the beach. Photo: Renee Sauer
Get Involved
Black Skimmers nesting on the beach. Photo: Cynthia Herrick/³Ô¹ÏºÚÁÏ Photography Awards
Get the Inside Scoop
Project Team

Lindsay Addison

Coastal Biologist

Marlene Eader

Volunteer Coordinator