Volunteer Opportunities The following are examples of the type of volunteer opportunities in which
our members are involved. In addition, the club is often in need of
volunteers to serve on the board, lead walks, etc. If you would like more
information on other volunteering possibilities, please fill out the form
and either bring it to a meeting or send it to the address indicated on the
form. See the bluebirds page for more informaton. Mass Audubon Coastal Waterbird Program Volunteers are needed to monitor piping plovers and terns from April -
July. Wellfleet Bay Wildlife Sanctuary monitors and protects birds from Truro to Harwich (volunteers especially needed in Chatham and Harwich).
Training provided in March and throughout season. Contact Cynthia
Franklin, volunteer coordinator at 508-349-2615 or cfranklin@massaudubon.org. Other areas of the Cape are typically monitored by Coastal Waterbird Program seasonal staff, but contact
Becky Harris (bharris@massaudubon.org) who has occasional needs for volunteer help on the mid-upper Cape. Massachusetts Breeding Bird Atlas 2
Mass Audubon has announced the initiation of the Massachusetts Breeding Bird Atlas
2 which will systematically map the status of breeding birds
on a statewide scale. Mass Audubon needs volunteers to help
survey our area for breeding birds. Volunteers can either
sign up to survey a whole block to survey, or individuals may
report single sightings a single breeding bird. Click
here to find out more.
MAS Long Pasture and Ashumet Holly Wildlife Sanctuary Volunteers Volunteers Needed to Monitor Ospreys for the Mass Audubon’s “Osprey Project” The return of the osprey is one of the greatest conservation stories of the last 30 years. In the early 1970s there were as few as 10 nesting pairs of these fish-eating birds of prey in Massachusetts. Now that number is over 400 pairs statewide. Cape Cod has also seen resurgence with an estimated 50 pairs now nesting on Cape Cod. Mass Audubon’s Wellfleet Bay Wildlife Sanctuary is developing the Osprey Project, a project to monitor nesting ospreys and their productivity on the mid and lower Cape. Volunteers are needed to assist with osprey observations. |