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19th Annual Gala Dinner and Benefit Auction
Sat Feb 25 @ 5:00PM - 9:00PM
New Volunteer Orientation
Sat Mar 03 @10:00AM - 11:30AM

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Are you a Colorado Government Employee?

If so, you can easily designate your charitable contribution to RMRP through the Colorado Combined Campaign. Right now, State employees are participating in workplace giving campaigns and making pledges via payroll deduction, cash, check or credit card. No matter the amount, your contribution makes a huge difference!

Colorado Combined Campaign: http://www.colorado.gov/ccc/

Pledge online: https://donor.unitedeway.org/?campaign=ccc11

You are here: Home Education Why Protect Raptors?
Why Protect Raptors?
Raptors - Eagles, Owls, Hawks, Falcons… No other group of birds stirs the imagination, lifts our spirits and symbolizes noble qualities more than these.

Against a backdrop of Colorado's 14,000-foot mountains, these inspiring creatures fly free, hunters on the wind.

 

We’re Losing Habitat At An Alarming Rate
Habitat loss reduces raptor nest sites, hunting habitat, and winter roost sites. Habitat reduction also increases human-raptor conflicts such as collisions with cars, power lines, and other man-made structures.

Raptors Help Maintain The Balance of Nature
While they pose practically no threat to humans, raptors play a vitally important role in the earth’s “web of life” because they prey on small animals such as rodents, birds, fish, reptiles and amphibians. Those in agriculture appreciate raptors because of the millions of rodents, grasshoppers, and other insects they consume every year. Without raptors’ natural population control, these prey species’ populations could upset the balance of nature.

Raptors Serve As Environmental Barometers
Raptors also serve as environmental barometers, constantly echoing the health of the natural world. Environmental toxins build up in prey animals; these poisons in the food chain become greatly magnified by the time these animals are ingested by the raptors. Healthy raptor populations equal healthy human environments!

Raptor Populations Declined
This “biological magnification” of toxins occurred in the 1970’s, causing drastic reductions in the numbers of several raptor species, most notably, the bald eagle and peregrine falcon. These environmental disruptions provide a call to action to remove these toxins from our environment before they affect the human population.

You Can Help
It is up to us to make a difference for these magnificent creatures. We must never forget that we too are members of a food chain, and environmental factors that affect other species will eventually affect us.


 
Rocky Mountain Raptor Program
Mailing Address:
2519 South Shields Street, #115
Fort Collins, Colorado 80526
Location:
720 B East Vine Drive
Fort Collins, Colorado 80524
Phone: 970-484-7756 Emergency On-Call: 970-222-0322
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