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The nest series

Klaus EsterlußMay 6, 2015

Photographer Sharon Beals hopes her pictures of nests will invite viewers to start learning about the lives of nests' builders, and to take measures to help birds in any way they can.

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Vogelnester Galerie Sharon Beals
Image: Sharon Beals

San Francisco-based photographer Sharon Beals photographed all of the nests in the above gallery from historic ornithology collections housed by the California Academy of Sciences, the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, the Western Foundation of Vertebrate Zoology, the Cornell University Museum of Vertebrates, and the National Museum of Natural History at the Smithsonian.

The pictures have also been published in the book In Nests - Fifty Nests and the Birds that Built Them and are part of a project inspired by Scott Weidensaul’s book "Living on the Wind, Across the Hemispheres with Migrating Birds."

"Threaded through his essays about migration, which for many species of bird is an arduous, instinct-driven, thousands-of-miles journey, are stories of the survival challenges that [are faced by] many species of birds along the way, challenges most often created by humans," Beals explains.

Beals is currently working on a series of photographs of the nests of extinct and endangered species.

"It is my hope," she says, "that my images of these avian architectural feats will invite viewers who might never pick up a pair of binoculars, or open a birding guide, to learn about the lives of their builders, and take measures to help birds in any way they can."