Fen Favourite
The endangered bogbean buckmoth can be found today in only two places in Canada: two isolated fens in eastern Ontario. If those habitats disappear, so will this beautiful moth.
By Celia Milne
Keeping Ottawa Wet and Wild
The community of Stittsville is fighting to preserve a collection of wetlands that new provincial regulations have stripped of protection. Leading the community is a former politician weathered by conservation wins and losses.
By Conor Mihell
Raptor Rapture
During migrations, teams of seasoned counters track raptors’ passage through Ontario skies. Identifying individual birds takes detective work and resisting the temptation to rush to judgment.
By Julia Zarankin
Last Word
The Problem of “Too Many”
By Corina Brdar
Contact
- John Hassell, ON Nature editor
- johnh@ontarionature.org, 416-444-8419 ext. 269.
ON Nature, a nature and environment magazine, is published quarterly by Ontario Nature.
A charity representing more than 30,000 members and supporters, and more than 150 groups across the province, Ontario Nature’s mission is to protect wild species and wild spaces through conservation, education and public engagement.
ON Nature is a member-supported magazine. You can subscribe for just $50 per year and we will mail you a printed version of the magazine. Your subscription will help fund Ontario Nature’s projects to protect wild species and wild spaces. If you’re already a subscriber, thank you!
Advertising Opportunities: Winter 2024 ON NATURE Magazine
Flocking Together
How do birds stay warm and find food during Ontario’s frigid winters? A look at the adaptations that some of our avian favourites have made to survive cold months in the north.
By Julia Zarankin
Of Bats and Blades
Wind turbines are taking an increasing toll on Ontario’s migratory bat species, all of which are now listed as endangered. Solutions exist if there is the will to act.
By Brian Banks
King of the Fens
Beavers shape landscapes to their needs in ways humans don’t always appreciate. But their ecological importance requires managing them—and their creations—with care.
By Ian Coutts
Last Word
The economic and health value of nature.
By Ray Ford
Advertising
|