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Volunteers help build and deploy Prothonotary Warbler nest boxes
Volunteers rock! Over 20 volunteers showed up this weekend to help build and deploy Prothonotary Warbler nest boxes at Acadiana Park Nature Station! With their help, and generous donations of supplies, we were able to deploy 15 nest boxes around the park. We can't wait for the beautiful sight of yellow feathers in these nest boxes this spring!
Volunteers help build and deploy Prothonotary Warbler nest boxes at the Acadiana Park Nature Center. Photo: Erik Johnson
Volunteers help build and deploy Prothonotary Warbler nest boxes at the Acadiana Park Nature Center. Photo: Erik Johnson
Volunteers help build and deploy Prothonotary Warbler nest boxes at the Acadiana Park Nature Center. Photo: Erik Johnson
Volunteers help build and deploy Prothonotary Warbler nest boxes at the Acadiana Park Nature Center. Photo: Erik Johnson
Volunteers help build and deploy Prothonotary Warbler nest boxes at the Acadiana Park Nature Center. Photo: Erik Johnson
Volunteers help build and deploy Prothonotary Warbler nest boxes at the Acadiana Park Nature Center. Photo: Erik Johnson
Volunteers help build and deploy Prothonotary Warbler nest boxes at the Acadiana Park Nature Center. Photo: Erik Johnson
Volunteers help build and deploy Prothonotary Warbler nest boxes at the Acadiana Park Nature Center. Photo: Erik Johnson
Volunteers help build and deploy Prothonotary Warbler nest boxes at the Acadiana Park Nature Center. Photo: Erik Johnson
Volunteers help build and deploy Prothonotary Warbler nest boxes at the Acadiana Park Nature Center. Photo: Erik Johnson
Volunteers help build and deploy Prothonotary Warbler nest boxes
Volunteers rock! Over 20 volunteers showed up this weekend to help build and deploy Prothonotary Warbler nest boxes at Acadiana Park Nature Station! With their help, and generous donations of supplies, we were able to deploy 15 nest boxes around the park. We can't wait for the beautiful sight of yellow feathers in these nest boxes this spring!
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The 1-mile buffer that allegedly protects research stations is insufficient because volatile dicamba can travel for miles. Both crops and landscaping plants are injured by dicamba every year.
Small and surrounded by row crops, these sites are subjected to repeated dicamba exposure. Who pays for damages? Who is protecting them from chemical trespass?